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CASTOROLOGIA. 


‘* A subject which has, from the very inception 
of colonization, been associated with the in- 
dustrial and commercial development, and, 
indirectly, with the social life, the romance, 
and, to a considerable extent, even with the 
wars of Canada.’’ 


JOHN READE. 


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“CASTOROLOGIA 


OR THE 


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BiSLOR VY AND LRADELIONS 


OF THE 


CANADIAN BEAVER. 


By, 


HORACE TIT. MARTIN, ¥-Z:5., &ce: 


AN EXHAUSTIVE MONOGRAPH, POPULARLY WRITTEN 


AND 


HROPETE DE VIEILLE GI al III O), 


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& 10Q' 


‘ 
‘ 


MONTREAL: WM. DRYSDALE & 
No. 232 ST. JAMES STREET. 


LONDON: EDWARD STANFORD, 
Nos. 26 & 27 COCKSPUR STREET, CHARING Cross, S. W. 


1892. 


ait 
Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada, in the year eighteen hundred and 
ninety-two, by 
HORACE T. MARTIN, 
in the office of the Minister of Agriculture. 


DESBARATS & CO., ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS. 


BY PERMISSION 
DEDICATED 
TO 
Sir J. WM. DAWSON, LL.D., F.R.S., &e. 
IN GRATEFUL RECOGNITION 
OF HIS SERVICES 
TO STUDENTS 
OF 


CANADIAN NATURAL HISTORY. 


\ 


PREFACE. 


TRADITIONAL knowledge of the beaver is the birthright 
aX of every Canadian; yet, as in most cases where tradition 
alone is relied on, this knowledge is chiefly remarkable 
for its divergence from facts. As the acorn, falling on favorable 
soil, sends forth the slender shoot, which time and circumstance 
may model into a grotesque fetish for minds ignorant, or forget- 
ful of the simplicity of its origin; so, the facts of science, if 
nurtured by tradition, soon lose shape, and multitudes venerate 
the fabulous stories of dragon or beaver, with total disregard to 
outraged reason. Iconoclasm must, therefore, do its work, dis- 
tasteful as its spirit may be; for rather should we add, than take 
away one tittle of our nation’s lore; but such statements as can- 
not stand the search-light test of truth, must rank as fable; and 
while our story may lose some of its glamour when studied 
rationally, we surely do not need the chimerical to arouse our 
interest. 


Canada has been known for nearly three centuries as ‘‘ the 
home of the beaver,’’ and for over two hundred years this animal 
contributed to Canada’s most substantial advancement: inspiring 
adventures, stimulating enterprize, and laying the strong founda- 
tions of our commercial development. ‘Thus has the beaver played 
its part in the romance of our early history; the central figure 
around which waged the wars of nations, while powerful corpo- 


x 


rations and petty adventurers fought for monopolies few were able 
to control. 


The history of the beaver in Great Britain, has been concisely 
recorded by J. E. Harting; while an extensive volume, the work 
of Morgan and Ely, treats of the beaver in the United States. 
Conspicuous for original contributions on the Canadian beaver, 
we recognize Cartwright, in Labrador; Hardy, in New Bruns- 
wick; Venner, in Quebec; Wilson, in Ontario; and Green, in the 
Far West; but all these are eclipsed by Samuel Hearne, the 
Hudson’s Bay explorer and writer, whose observations will be 
worth, for all time, verbatim copy. Dr. Richardson’s monumental 
tome, though written half a century later, scarcely extends in the 
least our knowledge of this subject. 


To trace the tangled threads of the earlier chronicles, and to 
produce a worthy fabric, requires for every strand a mind peculiar 
to the theme—the patience and keen observance of the Antiquary 
—the genius of the Historian—the broad knowledge of the Biologist 
all these at least, and with these, the general love for the study 
of Nature. This last has been my slender equipment, but I have 
easily enlisted sympathetic help from members of the Anti- 
quarian Society, the Society for Historical Studies, and the Natural 
History Society of Montreal. To the Hon. Edward Murphy and 
to Mr. P. S. Murphy I am indebted for antiquarian notes; for 
the elucidation of many historical problems my thanks are due 
to Mr. Henry Mott and Mr. Gerald E. Hart; while for many 
kind and valuable services I am deeply grateful to Sir J. Wm. 
Dawson. Among my correspondents many have evinced a prac- 
tical interest, and I am proud to acknowledge many items from 
the fluent pen of Mr. J. M. LeMoine. During my sojourns abroad 
I received most friendly assistance, and acknowledge my obliga- 
tions to Mr. TT. F. Moore, Derby Museum, Liverpool; Mr. Chas. 
N. Read, Brit. Mus. (Ethnography) ; Mr. Oldfield Thomas and Mr. 
A. Smith Woodward, Brit. Mus. (Natural History); Mr. A. D. 
Bartlett, Regents Park Gardens ; and Mr. P. A. Sclater, Sec’y. Zool. 
Society, London ; who made available to me the privileges of those 


xi 


magnificent institutions. My numerous reading and thinking 
friends have, with a marvellous patience, endured these many years 
my demands for informations, and indeed their sympathy has been 
my greatest encouragement. 


I wish also to express my thanks to the publishers, who have 
so generously undertaken the responsibility of bringing before the 
public this, my initial volume; thereby preserving those traditions 
which make our great Dominion proud to own as its national 
totem, ‘“‘the beaver.’ 


HORACE T. MARTIN. 


MONTREAL, February, 1892. 


TABLE OF CONTENTS. 


PAGE 

LN RO DU CLIO Neer ss 6S, a ot Si So Loot ah gee Rm on, ee I 
CHAPTER: 

Wis HOE OG VerAND sh Ol KW ORI so i hoes pee eee ren cee ee ee 7 
CHAPTER IT. 

VERVE ODER AVIORG tes kin ha & Seyi we leh fl Melts. - or Seid oo fe tbs a teat Ghee 15 
CHAPTER Ill 

SREP  UROPRE ANE IBAVIER ss me ue Augoh on ca couse os ey ee 25 
CHARTER TV, 

THE MorE IMPORTANT AMERICAN RODENTS ............ ~~ 31 
CHAPTER V. 

LIFE HISTORY OF THE CANADIAN BEAVER ............. 41 
CHAPTER VI. 
CROCRAPEICADBDIGRRIBULION: soe a els st 4 9 2 a ss en eas eee 49 
CHAPTER VII. 

ENGINEERING ACCOMPLISHMENTS < . 4. ss 1 ole ee 6 ww ew Se 61 
CHAPTER Vili. 

EB CONOMICKCONSIDERATIONS <0 2 dtc) os 5h aes 6 oe any Wo Bens 79 
CHAPTER: IX 
CoE MICO SVE DI CAT PROPHRALTES =. yates. os. 5 Ga. sie see ys 89 
CHIAP TE REE 
IMPORTANCE IN TRADE AND COMMERCE ........ ar a eee 99 


CHAPTER XI. 
WSES OF THE BEAVEROINGMANUBACTURES  . 5.5.5 «922. 4 «= = a) LO 


XiV 


CHARTERS 
HUNTING THE BEAVER 


@HARAVE Reexeile 
EXPERIMENTS IN DOMESTICATION . 


CHAPTER exes 
ANATOMY—OSTEOLOGY—TAXIDERMY 


CHAPTER XV. 
THE BEAVER IN HERALDRY . 


APPENDICES. 


APPENDIX—A. 
PHOTO-COPIES FROM ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS—1I72I-1726 


APPENDIX—B. 
SAMUEL HEARNE’S ACCOUNT OF THE BEAVER . 


APPENDIX—C. 
PLAPTYPSYLLUS CASTORIS . 


133 


153 


7a 


189 


207 


219 


235 


Wis On ILE USLRATIONS: 


PAGE 
A Scene in the Laurentides eee eos rp . Frontispiece 
Figure of a Beaver from the earliest known Monograph 4 
Arme des Hurons 6 
Wonders of the New World E II 
The Beaver and His Famous Lodges eee: an old Meant: aes) 14 
Fiber Zibethicus—Castor Canadensis—Castoroides Ohioensis . 21 
Lower Jaw of Trogontherium Cuvieri (half natural size) after Owen. . . 24 
Lower Jaw of the European Beaver, from Peat Moss, Newbury, England . 30 
Fiber Zibethicus—The Musk Beaver : 34 
Myopotamus Coypus—The South American Beaver 36 
The Largest Existing Rodent—Hydrocherus Capybara 40 
The First Work of the Beaver Kitten Beebe! 43 
Stump Showing Cuttings from Various Levels of Snow . 47 
The Large Yellow Pond Lily (Nuphar Advena) 48 
Beaver Hunting Grounds of the Iroquois 54-55 
Map Showing Distribution of Beaver—about “ 58 
The Advance of Civilization 60 
LeBeau’s Marvelous Vision ee 65 
Stump Showing that Methods of Cutting eas ; 68 
The Beaver Canal, from ‘‘ The American Beaver and his Works”’ . 73 
Beaver Chips : : , 78 
Fur Traders “‘Squatting’’ on the Prairie near Fort ee 1876 é 82 
Beaver Tooth Chisel, from a Specimen in the British Museum . 87 
Title Page of the Original Castorologia 93 
Lower Incisor Tooth of the Beaver 96 
Dried Castoreum Pouches—‘‘ Bark Stone,’’ or ‘‘ Beaver Castors ”’ 98 
Tally for Five Beavers . : 106 
The Hudson’s Bay Company’s Beaver Token 108 
The North West Company’s Beaver Token 112 


XVI 


A Trapper and Trader of the Old Régime . 


From ‘Illustrated Montreal,’’ by permission J McConniff. 


Lake Superior, or The Spirit Land 

Beaver Fur, Magnified 50 Diameters . 

St. Clement, Patron Saint of the Hatters . 
Modifications of the Beaver Hat : 
The Hood, or Beaver Hat in its First Form 
Beaver Fur, Magnified 250 Diameters . 


Diagram of a Beaver Hunt—1704 


The Beaver Hunting Country of the Six Nation ae ere 


Beaver Trap, with Clutch. . 

Quickwahay—The ‘‘ Beaver Eater’’ : 

The Deadfall (as now used for Mink or Santo. 

The Marquis of Bute’s Beaver Enclosure—July 1889 
“No Person Allowed Within the Beaver Enclosure ”’ . 
Beaver’s Head (Study from Still Life) . 

Tail of the Beaver—Direct from Nature . 


Skulls Showing the Features on which the Specific Difference is based 


Artistic Taxidermy Applied to the Beaver . 


This group has been presented to the Redpath Museum, McGill 


College, in the name of the late Roswell C. Lyman. 
Taxidermic Monstrosities . 
Postage Stamp, issued 1851 . 
Seals of the New Netherlands 
Coat of Arms of the City of Montreal 
Early Arms of Canada (unauthenticated) 


Suggestion for a Complete Coat of Arms for the Dominion of Canada . 


Platypsyllus Castoris . 


INTRODUCTION. 


SALUTATION FROM THE KING OF BEAVERS. 


By GEORGE MARTIN. 


“Welcome to the kindly home 
Where we shape the wattled dome, 
Where, in moonlight’s silver calm, 
My faithful subjects build the dam ; 
The land whose maple leaf conveys 
A prophecy of sweetened days. 


We're grateful for the honor given 
To beaverhood, since nearer heaven 
This great Dominion raised our name, 
Emblazoned on the scroll of fame ; 
A choice that to the world attests 
The base on which its greatness rests, 
Our one transcendent, special gift :— 
Persistency of honest thrift.” 


ENERODUCTION: 


ANADA offers to the naturalist an exceptional invitation, in 
(- her grand possessions of primeval forest, trackless prairie, 
mountain ranges, lakes and rivers. Nature’s domain is, 
however, so vast, that the mind is perplexed with the endless 
beauty of the panorama, and instead of boldly pressing on nature, 
for the unfolding of her secrets, the observer pauses before the great 
chain of interdependent phenomena. ‘The subject as a whole, being 
beyond the grasp of most minds, contentment will be found in 
selecting a minor feature, and devoting to it close study. 


The early adventurers in the New World met with many novel- 
ties and the interest manifested in these discoveries called forth 
accounts concerning them. Though the temptation to startle the 
Old World readers by fabulous tales, was frequently yielded to, all 
the early records are valuable, as containing the germs of our cur- 
rent traditions. 


The discovery of the Canadian Beaver was coincident with the 
discovery of Canada. From the earliest days, the animal was recog- 
nized as of great importance to Canada, and this association has 
given her the beaver as a national symbol. The name of the Indian 
village, Hochelaga, visited by Jacques Cartier in 1536, is an Algon- 
quin word, signifying ‘‘beaver-meadows,’’ and as colonies of beavers 
were not unusually found in the immediate vicinity of the Indian 


4 CASTOROLOGIA. 


settlements, we may reasonably infer that much of the present site 
of the city of Montreal, was then occupied by them. 


It was not, however, till the establishing of the fur-trading post 
at Quebec in 1604, and at Montreal in 1611, that the commercial 
importance was taken advantage of, and the destruction of the 
beaver hosts began. ‘Though the beaver trade of Canada soon 
assumed proportions commanding the attention of Parliament, it 


FIGURE OF A BEAVER FROM THE EARLIEST KNOWN MONOGRAPH —r1685. 


was two centuries later, before science manifested any interest. In 
1820, Kuhl published a description of a Canadian beaver, then in the 
British Museum, and named it Castor Canadensis, thus creating a 
specific name in contradistinction to Castor Luropeus, the European 
beaver. In size the creatures were much alike; in color the Kuro- 
pean was not so dark, but no difference of any moment was detected, 
till, in 1825, Frederick Cuvier pointed out a difference in the skulls, 
which has since been recognized as establishing the species. Kuhl’s, 
being the first distinctive name published to science, by the rules of 


CASTOROLOGIA, 5 


scientific nomenclature takes precedence, hence we have, fixed be- 
yond dispute, the scientific binomen, Castor Canadensis, giving the 
popular form, the Canadian beaver. 


The European beaver had formerly been widely spread over the 
Old World, and it had earned a conspicuous place in the thoughts of 
men, as early as the days of Heredotus, 420 to 480, B.C. ‘The 
Greeks called it Castor, from gastvo—the stomach, having reference 
to the appearance of the animal; while in Latin, we find many 
records of it under the names, ‘‘fibre,’’ ‘‘fiber’’ and ‘‘ fibir ;’’ cor- 
rupted from forum, and signifying that the animal dwelt on the 
banks or edges of the rivers and streams. ‘There is also a Latin 
form, ‘‘ beber,’’ with which there is evident connection in the Ger- 
man ‘‘biber,’’ the old French ‘‘beavre,’’ and the Anglo-Saxon 
‘“beofer,’’ ‘“‘befer,’’ and ‘‘beaver.’’ As the determining of scientific 
names rests absolutely on the rule of priority, regardless of correct- 
ness or suitability, many gross anomalies occur; but in the present 
case no alteration or improvement could be wished for, as the 
scientific name admits of translation into terms fairly descriptive of 
the creature and its habits. 


With this general introduction, enquiry may now be made 
regarding the antecedents of the beaver, and though the Old World 
records date very early, the traditions of the North American 
Indians, which associate the beaver with the creation of the world, 
merit first consideration. 


Armeé des Hurons. 


MYTHOLOGY AND FOLKLORE. 


‘*‘ Should you ask me, whence these stories? 
Whence these legends and traditions, 
With the odors of the forest, 

With the dew and damp of meadows, 
With the curling smoke of wigwams, . . 

I should answer, I should tell you, 

‘From the forest and the prairies, 

From the great lakes of the Northland, 
From the land of the Ojibways, 

From the land of the Dacotahs, . 

I repeat them as I heard them 

T'rom the lips of Nawadaha, 

The musician, the sweet singer.’ 

Should you ask where Nawadaha 
Found these songs, so wild and wayward, 
Found these legends and traditions, 

I should answer, I should tell you, 

In the birds’-nests of the forest, 

In the lodges of the beaver,’”’ . 


—The Song of Hiawatha. 


CHAPTER ik 


TRADITIONS CONCERNING THE BEAVER AND THE WORLD’S CREATION— 
PRODIGIES ASCRIBED TO EARLY MEMBERS—THE BEAVER AS THE 
PROGENITOR OF MAN—SUPPOSED INFLUENCE OF BEAVER GHOSTS— 
REVERENCE WITH WHICH THE BEAVER IS TREATED—BEAVER FABLES 
—EARLY COLONIAL SUPERSTITIONS REGARDING ANIMAL LIFE. 


Before relating what may be called the sacred legends of the 
beaver, it may be well, first, to consider the people in whose minds 
the stories originated. It is generally admitted that climate has a re- 
markable effect on character, and with all the varieties from tropical 
to arctic, included in the original habitat of the Indians, a great 
diversity of character might be expected. In fact, they cannot be 
studied as one people, any more than could the present inhabitants 
of Europe, be described in one simple phrase. Thus, to the South, 
there were the ‘‘ Digger’’ Indians, and the ‘‘ Fishing’’ tribes—in- 
different and unprogressive—and with them, the robber bands who 
preyed upon them. Further to the North a sturdier race, the great 
warriors, distracting their neighbours, north and south, making 
captives and generally playing the part of a military nation ; while 
on this plane would be included settled and industrious tribes, such 
as the Hochelagans. Still higher in latitude the hardy fur-hunters, 
whose dealings with the Hudson’s Bay Company for over two 
centuries, furnish ample ground for the conception of the noble 
possibilities of the ‘‘redman;’’ and with such names as Pontiac, 
Tecumseth and Brant, illuminating the pages of our history, we 
need not choose types from the poor wretches who have fallen heir 
to our vices only. 


Then may we hold more respect for our red-skinned brother, and 
treat with reverence those traditions which to him were most sacred. 


Io CASTOROLOGIA. 


While the Indian cannot justly be classified among the spirit- 
worshippers, though he had clear conceptions of spirits and a spirit- 
world, yet he is much above the range of fetishism, and may most 
properly be considered as a nature-worshipper. Being of a medita- 
tive mind, he reasoned far beyond the visible world, though he 
based his belief on material evidence. It was a logical process of 
reasoning that brought him to face the problem of the world’s 
creation. He believed the world was all covered with water in the 
beginning, and he peopled it with the beaver, the musquash and 
the otter, whose aquatic habits we can easily understand must have 
impressed him. But, as the building of the world was a prodigious 
task, these animals were all of gigantic size. They dived and 
brought up the mud with which the great spirit—the Manitou— 
made the earth. ‘Then the features of the earth, the mountain 
ranges, cataracts and caves, were all the works of the giant beavers ; 
and the erratic boulders, which, in many places, stand so conspicu- 
ously in our landscape, were the missles thrown by enraged spirits 
at offending beavers. 


When the world became ready for the introduction of man, the 
Indian philosophy solved the problem in a way that was curious and 
masterly. ‘The animals were said to have been endowed with 
speech, and seemed to have used the gift even as wicked mortals 
often do, accordingly, the great Manitou would frequently be vexed, 
and his wrath caused him at times to slay the evil-doer. Then, by 
a beautiful adaptation of the idea of the transmigration of spirits, 
man came forth as the spirit of the departed animal, and bore hence- 
forth a likeness in character to the animal from which he sprang. 
The Amikonas, or ‘‘ People of the Beaver,’’ an Algonquin tribe of 
Lake Huron, claimed descent from the carcass of the great original 
beaver, or father of the beavers; and the beaver was one of the eight 
clans of the Iroquois. In the wonderful totem-poles of the Queen 
Charlotte Islanders, a prominent place is afforded the beaver, and 
doubtless the Hochelagans, or ‘‘ Indians of the Beaver-Meadow,”’ 
held the creature in high esteem. 


The Manitou was good to man, and to make him chief among 


iH} i 


mal 
(HY 


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} 


’ 


i) 


WONDERS OF THE NEW WORLD. 


CASTOROLOGIA. Tes 


all living things, the Good Spirit ‘‘smoothed with his hand the giant 
beasts, making them gradually smaller,’’ and then he deprived them 
of the power of speech. Though animals were thus subjected to 
man, both were accountable to the Manitou ; and even the animals 
and their departed spirits had powers affecting man. Many records 
relate the petitions of the Hunter before starting for the chase, 
which invariably included the promise of all reverence to be paid 
his victims. In this respect, the beaver, as the most valuable con- 
tributor to the social economy of the Indian, was the object of special 
regard, and roasted beaver was the highest desire of the Indian. 
After the feast the sacred bone was raised to its altar, an evidence 
of honor paid to the departed beaver, and then the remains were 
gathered with care and returned to the water, so that the dogs 
touched none of it. Woe to the luckless hunter who did dishonor 
to the bones of the beaver, and thus displeased the spirits; the 
beavers at once became shy, and in vain might he lay his traps. 


Many of these matters may seem childish and unworthy serious 
repetition, but surely they are of more profit than the fabulous 
accounts of the beaver which practically constitute the popular 
range of beaver literature. The animal itself has been represented 
in forms the most grotesque, some of which are selected as the 
illustrations of this chapter; and his works have been exaggerated 
beyond all recognition. ‘The dam has been described as formed of 
stakes five or six feet long driven into the ground in rows, with 
pliant twigs wattled between ‘‘as hurdles are made;’’ and the 
lodge has been extended to a five story building with windows and 
other conveniences ; while in the erection of these, the tail has been 
converted into a vehicle for conveying the materials, a pile-driver 
for placing the stakes, and a trowel for plastering the house. In 
fact as Hearne wrote in 1771, the only thing that remained to make 
their natural history complete, was the adding of ‘‘a vocabulary of 
their language, a code of their laws, and a sketch of their religion.’’ 


Hither from a misinterpretation of the Indian legends, or a mis- 
use of the imaginative faculties, or from both, there exists univer- 
sally in the early colonial writings the most astonishing references 


14 CASTOROLOGIA. 


to the wild animals of the country, and the following quotation will 
show the extreme to which these fancies reached: ‘‘On the borders 
of Canada, animals are now and again seen resembling a horse; they 
have cloven hoofs, shaggy manes, a horn right out of the forehead, 
a tail like a wild hog.”’ 


This creature was figured by Arnoldus Montanus, in 1671, with 
some of the other animals of the New World, including the beaver, 
and will easily be recognized in the accompanying group of chim- 
eras, which is reproduced from the copy in the Documentary His- 
tory of New York. 


THE BEAVER AND HIS FAMOUS LODGES. 
FROM AN OLD PRINT, 1755. 


MAMMOTH BEAVERS. 


“To the beavers Paw-Puk-Keewis 
Spake entreating, said in this wise: 

‘Very pleasant is your dwelling, 
O my friends! and safe from danger ; 
Can you not with all your cunning, 
All your wisdom and contrivance, 
Change me, too, into a beaver?’ 

‘ Yes,’ replied Ahmeek, the beaver, 
He the king of all the beavers, 

‘Let yourself slide down among us, 
Down into the tranqui! water.’ 


‘Make me large,’ said Paw-Puk-Keewis 
‘Make me large, and make me larger, 
Larger than the other beavers.’ 
‘Yes,’ the beaver chief responded, 
‘When our lodge below you enter, 
In our Wigwam we will make you 
Ten times larger than the others.’ ”’ 


—The Hunting of Paw-Puk-Keewts. 


CHAPTER IT. 


INDIAN LEGENDS OF GIANT BEAVERS—DISCOVERY OF TROGONTHERIUM, 
CUVIER’S GIGANTIC BEAVER—A SEARCH FOR THE FOSSIL BEAVER OF 
NorRTH AMERICA—CASTOROIDES OHIOENSIS—REFLECTIONS ON THE 
FORM AND CHARACTERISTICS OF THESE ANIMALS—THE CHANGES OF 
FAUNA IN RECENT TIMES. 


We have already told how the Indians, basing their arguments 
on material phenomena, reasoned as to the formation of the various 
features of the earth, and by introducing the industrious beaver, 
they explained many of the characteristics of the landscape which to 
them appeared like the beaver’s work ; but, the proportions being 
so disparaging as to necessitate the conception of animals with more 
power and knowledge, we find a belief in the Indian mind concern- 
ing giant beavers and their herculean work. Many of these stories 
occur in the Eskimo legends, and the range may be said to extend 
over the whole of North America, and to occupy a foremost place 
in the thought of all its varying inhabitants. Pitetot records a 
legend of the West, wherein the tooth of the great beaver was made 
into an adze for hollowing out logs of wood for canoes. In the 
Algonquin Legends of New England, Chas. Leland introduces Quah- 
beet, the giant beaver, the clapping of whose tail made the thunders; 
and with all the strength of local coloring is told its various accom- 
plishments towards shaping the earth. The Micmacs recognized 
the site of a beaver-dam which once flooded the Annapolis Valley ; 
and they say the bones of the beavers who built this dam may still 
be found, and the teeth are six inches across. According to a tra- 
dition of the Ojibways, there was an immense beaver in some part 
of Lake Superior. The Indians point out an island in the lake, 
about two miles long, and one and a third broad, and say that the 
beaver spoken of was the same size. Another story relates how 


18 CASTOROLOGIA. 


Nanahbozho went one morning to Lake Superior for the purpose of 
catching a beaver for his breakfast. He succeeded in dislodging a 
young beaver and chased it towards the Sault Ste. Marie; a stone, 
thirty feet in diameter, to be seen to-day on the shores of Lake 
Michigan, was a missile used by Nanahbozho in this chase. The 
beaver was eventually caught in the Ottawa, and its head was 
dashed against the rocky banks of the river where the Indians say 
the marks of blood are still to be seen. 


In 1828, an English scientist, Mr. Charles Fothergill, made a 
short sojourn in Montreal preparatory to visiting our great lone 
lands. During his stay in our city, it happened that the Natural 
History Society had invited essays on the subject of the ‘‘Quadru- 
peds of British North America,’’ offering a prize for the best contri- 
bution. Mr. Fothergill became a party to the contest, thus eviden- 
cing his knowledge of our fauna, and in the course of his paper he 
makes the extraordinary admission that he has visited Canada with 
a view of searching our great North-Western Provinces, if perchance 
he might still find living evidence of ‘‘the Mammoth, the great Elk 
of the Antideluvians, and the giant Beaver; especially,’’ says 
Mr. Fothergill, ‘‘as the Indians have many legends concerning 
these mammals, and Indian legends are seldom without some truth 
for their foundation.’’ ‘The essay is a most interesting and valuable 
survey of our mammals, and such faith had the essayist in the 
objects of his search, that he enumerates, among Canadian animals 
the Great Beaver, and says :— 


‘‘T have been induced to name the Great Beaver in this cata- 
logue because there is pretty certain evidence of the existence of 
such an animal in various parts of the interior towards the North- 
West. ‘The Indians of many tribes firmly believe in its existetice, 
and assert they have often seen it. I will take, or endeavour to take, an 
early opportunity to lay before the society such evidences as are in 
my possession to prove the fact; in the meanwhile, I will merely 
remark that the skull which was found on the banks of the Dela- 
ware nearly forty years ago—which induced the naturalists of the 
United States to create a new genus under the title of Asteopera— 


CASTOROLOGIA. 19 


and which skull is still preserved in the Philadelphia Museum, in 
my mind belonged, beyond all doubt, to this animal, which is still 
in existence in our remote lakes and rivers in the interior.”’ 


Surely the essayist could not have known of the accomplish- 
ments of Sir Alexander Mackenzie, the discoverer of the Mackenzie 
River, in 1789; and of David Thompson the geographer of the North 
West Company, whose knowledge of the further north-west became 
the basis of all later surveying. It is easily possible to conjecture 
the fate of such a scheme, in discussion before the members of the 
‘“Beaver Club,’’ for among them could be counted those who were 
personally acquainted with the greater part of the ‘‘fur-country,”’ 
and their accumulated experience may be said to have exhausted the 
barest possibility of the existence in the flesh of the Great Beaver. 


A close relationship may, however, be traced through the Euro- 
pean fossil which was first discovered by M. Gothelf de Fischer, in 
the sandy borders of the Sea of Azof; and which has since been 
found at Ostend, Belgium; and at Cromer, and Walker’s Cliff in 
Norfolk, England, together with the bones of the Mammoth and 
the Rhinoceros. ‘The animal was named after Cuvier, the eminent 
Paleontologist; Zvogontherium Cuviert, or Cuvier’s Gigantic 
Beaver. A figure of the fossil was sent to Cuvier, who claimed for 
it so close an affinity with the beavers as to rank in the same genus, 
and he proposed the name Castor Trogonthertum. Ue says that 
‘‘the teeth and all the forms of the head bear the character of the 
beaver ; and it could not be distinguished from the head of the adult 
beaver of Canada if the fossil were not one-fourth larger. How- 
ever, as it is not certain that we possess the skulls of these existing 
beavers which attain the largest size; and since the beaver formerly 
inhabited, and still, perhaps, inhabits the shores of Euxine ; since, 
also, nearly all the borders of the Sea of Azof, are but vast alluvial 
formations,—I think one ought to know precisely the matrix of the 
skull in question before deciding it belonged to an extinct animal.”’ 
These remarks appeared in 1812, and again in a second edition in 
1823; and may possibly have been the inspiration under which Mr. 
Fothergill set out to discover the American representative. 


20 CASTOROLOGIA. 


For those who were conversant with the traditions of the giant 
beaver, and, who, like the essayist quoted, believed that the Indian 
legends were based on fact, a triumph was close at hand. In 1837, 
in the Report of the Geology of Ohio, Mr. J. W. Foster called the 
attention of science to the discovery of a fossil, suggesting an extinct 
animal of the Order Rodentia ; and in 1838 he gave a description of 
the lower jaw, which he had found at Nashport, Licking County, 
Ohio, under the name of Castoroides Ohioensts. ‘Ten years later the 
nearly perfect skull was obtained by the Rev. Benjamin Hale, of 
Geneva College, and on this specimen a monograph was prepared 
by Messrs. Hall & Wyman, which appeared in the Boston Journal 
of Natural History in 1847. Since then specimens have been found 
at Clyde, Wayne County, New York; Memphis, Tennessee ; near 
Charleston and Schawneetown, Illinois; also in Michigan, Missis- 
sippi, Louisiana, Texas and South Carolina; giving a known 
habitat extending from the States of New York and South Carolina, 
westward to Michigan and Texas. These fragments do not, how- 
ever, give any knowledge concerning the general form and charac- 
teristics of the animal, for they are all parts of the skull only, and 
are mainly but pieces of the teeth. Enough, however, has been 
determined to ally the animal closely with the beaver, and it is 
popularly called the ‘‘ Fossil Beaver of North America.’’ ‘Though 
it is possible to recognize a likeness in dentition and cranial char- 
acter with the genus Caséor, it must not be implied that its habits 
and form were identical with the beaver as we know it to-day; 
a glance at the accompanying plate shows that the brain capacity is 
smaller than the beaver, and this alone indicates essential differ- 
ences of character ; in fact there are some features more clearly 
resembling the Capybara, and yet there is enough difference from 
either to constitute a new genus. 


The age to which both these fossil animals belonged is a 
matter of importance, as also, is the fact that they lived within 
historic times, and were, doubtless, well known to the early 
races of men. ‘The period is comprehended in geologic terms, as 
the ‘‘Quaternary, or Age of Man,’”’ and though it is spoken 
of geologically as recent, any calculation in years would be stupen- 


LSVO ‘“SISNHAWYNVD YOLSVD ‘SOQOIHLAGIZ WAAT: 


‘SISNHOIHO SHAIOUO 


EC ohare 


CASTOROLOGIA. a3 


dous, as a passing study of the age will show. Dana says: ‘‘ America 
in the Quaternary era was inferior to Europe in the number of 
its Carnivores, but exhibited the gigantic feature of the life of 
its time in its species. In North America the mammals _in- 
cluded an elephant (Zvephas Americanus) as large as the European, 
besides the Asiatic, (Alephas Primegenius) in the more northern 
latitudes ; a mastodon (JZastodon Americanus) of still greater mag- 
nitude ; horses much larger than the modern ; species of ox, bison, 
tapir, gigantic beavers, etc.’’ 


In the ‘‘ Handbook of Canadian Geology,’’ Sir William Dawson 
divides the Quaternary into Pleistocene and Modern ; and the latter 
is again divided into two periods and treated as follows :— 

““1, Zhe Post Glacial, ‘The climate was temperate but some- 
what extreme. All the modern mammals, including man, seem to 
have been in existence, but several others now extinct, as the Mam- 
moth, the Tichorhine Rhinoceros and the Cave Bear, lived in the 
Northern Hemisphere,. . . . This period was terminated by a 
submergence or a series of submergences which with their accom- 
panying physical changes proved fatal to many species of animals 
and to the oldest races of men, and left the continents at a lower 
level than at present, from which they have risen in the recent 
period . 


‘“2. The Recent or Historic Period. ‘This dates from the settle- 
ment of our continents at the present levels after the Post-Glacial 
subsidence. 


‘‘T have called this the Historic Period, because in some regions 
history and tradition extend back to its beginnings. The historical 
deluge is in all likelihood identical with the movements of the land 
above referred to, by which this age was inaugurated ; though in 
certain localities, as in America, the beginning of the historic period 
is very recent. In this age man co-exists wholly with existing 
species of mammals, and the races of men are the same which still 
survive. The whole forms geologically one period, and the distinc- 


24 CASTOROLOGIA. 


tions made by antiquarians between stone, bronze and iron ages, and 
under the former between palzeolithic and neolithic, are merely of 
local significance and connected with no physical or vital changes of 
geological importance. The real geological distinction is that of 
Palzeocosmic, Post-glacial or Antediluvian man on the one hand 
and Neocosmic, Recent or Post-diluvian on the other. ‘The Palzeo- 
cosmic men have been divided in two races, the Canstadt or Nean- 
derthal type and the Engis or Cromagnon type. Both of these were 
contemporaneous with the mammoth, the Tichorhine Rhinoceros 
and other Post-glacial animals now extinct. Itis probable that they 
may be ultimately identified with the ruder tribes of the historical 
antediluvian period, and that the physical changes by which they 
and some other animals seem to have been destroyed, were the same 
with those recorded in the ancient history and traditions of all the 
older races of men.”’ 


While yet there are many fascinating problems which geology 
might solve, we must pass on to consider the changes in recent 
fauna brought about by the advance of civilization, and for the pre- 
sent we very reluctantly leave the facts and the fables concerning 
the Great Beavers. 


LOWER JAW OF TROGONTHERIUM CUVIERI. 


(HALF NATURAL SIZE) AFTER OWEN. 


THE EUROPEAN BEAVER. 


‘* More famous long agone, than for the salmon’s leap, 
For bevers Tivy was, in her strong banks that bred, 
Which else no other brook of Britain nourished ; 
Where nature, in the shape of this now perished beast, 
His property did seem t’ have wondrously express’d 
Being body’d like a boat, with such a mighty tail 
As served him for a bridge, a helm, or for a sail, 
When kind did him command the architect to play, 
That his strong castle built of branched twigs and clay ; 
Which, set upon the deep, but yet not fixed there, 
He easily could remove as it he pleas’d to steer 
To this side or to that ; the workmanship so rare, 
His stuff wherewith to build, first being to prepare, 
A foraging he goes, to groves or bushes nigh, 
And with his teeth cuts down his timber ; which laid by, 
He turns him on his back, his belly laid abroad, 
When, with what he hath got, the other do him load ; 
Till lastly, by the weight, his burden he have found, 
Then with his mighty tail his carriage having bound 
As carters do with ropes, in his sharp teeth he grip’d 
Some stronger stick ; from which the lesser branches stript. 
He takes it in the midst ; at both ends the rest 
Hard holding with their fangs, unto the labour prest, 
Going backward tow’rds their home their loaded carriage led, 
From whom, those first here born, were taught the useful sled. 
Then builded he his fort for strong and several fights ; 
Ilis passages contriv’d with such unusual sleights, 
That from the hunter oft he issu’d undiscern’d, . 
As if men from this beast to fortify had learned, 
Whose kind, in her decay’d, is to this isle unknown, 
Thus Tivy boasts this beast peculiarly her own.”’ 


—Drayton. 


CHAP TE Rau: 


THE FORMER DISTRIBUTION OF CASTOR EvUROPAUS—ITS EXTERMINATION 
COINCIDENT WITH THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION—THE BEAVER 
EXTINCY IN BRITAIN WITHIN HISTORIC TIMES. 


When we consider that the age of the European beaver extended 
back to the days of the gigantic creatures spoken of in the last 
chapter, and that its distribution once included all Europe, the 
greater part of Asia, and northern Africa, we wonder, that we are 
not better acquainted with it. The fact, however, that for over 
two centuries, the hunting of beavers in America, yielded fortunes 
to the monopolists who controlled the trafic, would naturally attract 
the attention of the masses to the quarter of the world where these 
riches were being gathered. Canada was justly called the home of 
the beaver, but very incorrectly has it become popularly understood 
that Canada was the only home. 


The peculiar association of the beaver with Solomon’s wisdom, 
which will be referred to hereafter, indicates reasonable grounds for 
asserting that the beaver should have been mentioned in sacred writ ; 
its remarkable characteristics had been noted long before the Chris- 
tian era, and references to it are found in the hieroglyphics of the 
Egyptians. 


The beaver has gradually disappeared before the spread of civili- 
zation, which first settled along the shores of the Mediterranean. As 
each wave covered more of Europe, the range wherein the beaver 
existed perceptibly narrowed and the several stages through which 
it has already passed in America, have all been witnessed in 
Europe. Undoubtedly the animal was formerly very abundant in 
Europe ; the next stage was the alarm caused by an apparent scar- 


28 CASTOROLOGIA. 


city, and the effort to prevent careless slaughter and thus prolong the 
existence of the last few colonies, by framing protective laws and 
granting exclusive privileges of hunting; but this resulted only 
in heightening the ingenuity of the hunters and actually hastened 
the extinction of the animal. In a German charter in 1103, the 
right of hunting beavers was conferred along with other huntings and 
fishings ; and a Bull of Pope Lucius III, in the year 1182, bestowed 
upon a monastery the property in the beavers within their bounds ; 
while we read of beaver-reserves in Poland in the 16th century and 
know of some late settlements in France. A Prussian royal edict, 
dated 20th January 1714, concerned the beavers in the Elbe, while 
one subsequent, issued at Berlin on the twenty-fourth day of March, 
1725, insisted on the protection of the beavers, under a penalty of 
no less than a sum equalling two hundred dollars. But the laws of 
man made little difference to the laws of nature, and no artificial 
device could prolong appreciably the life of the Beaver in unnatural 
surroundings, for to-day it is a matter of amazement that a few colo- 
nies yet remain in the remote wilds of Scandinavia, and it seems re- 
markable that Siberia should still send a few beaver skins to market. 
A study of the history of the beaver in the British Isles will serve to 
illustrate more fully this question of beaver extermination, and the 
lesson studied here on a small scale may be applied to more impor- 
tant issues. 


Archeologists, through their researches, have made known so 
perfectly the conditions of the primitive inhabitants of Great Britain 
that their day comes almost within historic range, and we can claim 
nearly as intimate acquaintance with their habits and manners as if 
they had left written histories. The remnants of the “dug out”’ 
canoes and the discovery of the teeth of the beaver alongside of the 
rude stone implements, is strong evidence of a condition of things in 
England very similar to what was found existing in Canada only 
three centuries ago, and survivals of which may even yet be found 
among some of our Indian tribes. The fact that bones of the beaver 
have been discovered in so many parts of England and Scotland, 
shows a very wide distribution, and doubtless, the animal ranged 
formerly over the whole of Great Britain. Gradually civilization 


CASTOROLOGIA. 29 


spread from the south and the east, and as surely did the beaver 
vanish in these quarters, till history records it remaining only in the 
upper waters of Wales and the highland lakes of Scotland. The 
beaver was, of course, regularly hunted, but the objects of the chase, 
according to existing records, differed curiously from the incentives 
which have prompted the wasteful slaughter of the American beaver, 
for in the early and medizeval days of Europe, the greatest value was 
placed on the supposed medicinal properties, though the meat, espe- 
cially the tail, was even then in much repute, and the wool was 
esteemed for its fineness. In England the beaver had served its day 
of domestic economy to the natives, furnishing food and clothing ; 
then came a period, about the twelfth century, when the animal was 
closely hunted for castoreum and the skin; the large collection of 
skins inade this an article of export to the continent, where beaver- 
felt was greatly in favor. Soon, however, we read that, ‘‘ Tivy 
boasts this beast peculiarly her own,’’ and then followed a few 
spasmodic efforts of husbanding the beaver, till finally the creature 
passed from the records in 1526 and henceforth without opportunity 
of studying the habits of the animal, tradition enlarged the unwritten 
history, till we have the popular mind prepared to credit the most 
fabulous stories concerning the American beaver, though both 
species were singularly alike, and gave but little excuse for the 
extravagant accounts which are so freely accredited to them. 


Africa has long been without a sign of its former associations ; 
Europe claims one or two colonies as a matter of wonder; Asia, 
from the district of the Obi River alone, continues to furnish a few 
skins for the fur market ; while North America remains the last 
stage on which are witnessed the scenes of a doomed creature, whose 
days have been lengthened to the present, only by contributions 
levied upon the musquash and the coypu whose numbers have been 
heavily taxed, and whose history has thus become a necessary part 
of the present monograph. 


LOWER JAW OF THE EUROPEAN BEAVER, FROM PEAT MOSS, 


NEWBURY, ENGLAND. 


(NATURAL SIZE.) 


THE MORE IMPORTANT AMERICAN RODENTS. 


‘“The rodentia constitute by far the largest 
order of mammals, and one of the most impor- 
tant from an economic standpoint. Though 
the species are mostly small and apparently in- 
significant, their relations with man are of much 


moment.’’ 
—F. V. Hayden. 


““Some have gone back to the water and 
imitated the fish in their ocean home; and 
others, smaller and feebler, have lived on by 
means of their insignificance, their rapid multi- 
plication and their power of hiding.” 


—Arabella B. Buckley. 


CHAPTER IV. 


THE ORDER RODENTIA—ITS DISTRIBUTION—MODERN AMERICAN REPRE- 
SENTATIVES—FIBER ZIBETHICUS, THE MuskK BEAVER—THE CoyPU, OR 
SouTH AMERICAN BEAVER—THE CAPYBARA OR WATER-HOG—THE 
CANADIAN BEAVER, THE TYPE RODENT—ITS SPECIFIC CHARACTERS— 
NOTABLE VARIETIES. 


The gnawing animals—the Order Rodentia or Glires—are unmis~ 
takably characterized by their dentition, a form most familiar, which 
is thus technically described : 


‘“TIncisor teeth, two in each jaw, very large, with sharp cutting 
chisel-shaped edges, fitted for gnawing. No canine teeth, but a 
wide space between the incisors and the molars.’’ 


From the character of the teeth, we learn the nature of the food 
the animal is best provided to consume, and in the case of the 
Rodents the natural diet is the harder vegetable substances—stalks, 
roots, seeds and fruits. Representatives of the order are found in 
all parts of the world, but America contains nearly as many species 
as all the rest of the world put together. ‘Thus America may appro- 
priately be called the home of the Rodentia, for not only has it 
the numerical advantage, but the four representatives selected for 
treatment in this chapter—the musquash, coypu, capybara and 
beaver, all American species—are the largest and most valuable of 
the Order: 


The Musk beaver, or Musquash of the Indians, though the 
smallest of the four, and less than one-fourth the size of the Cana- 
dian beaver, is second only to it, in commercial importance and 
historic lore. The musquash is the sole representative of the Genus 


D 


34 CASTOROLOGIA. 


Fiber, and its habitat is confined strictly to North America; had it, 
however, been distributed more broadly its fame might have eclipsed 
that of the beaver, as it certainly will survive for generations after 
the last beaver has forever passed away ; for the musquash relies, 
not only on aquatic habits, but on ‘‘rapid multiplication and the 
power of hiding.”’ 


FIBER ZIBETHICUS—THE MUSK BEAVER. 


The musquash possesses a brain both of large size and of relatively 
high development, it builds a home, which might easily be mis- 
taken for the much boasted lodge of the beaver, and it is even a 
greater burrower. It shares with other aquatic animals much pro- 
minence in Indian mythology, and has been a great favorite in his 
fables. 


The collection of musquash skins amounts to millions annu- 
ally, and being comparatively inexpensive forms an important item 


CASTOROLOGIA. 35 


in manufacture. ‘The meat is regularly marketed in season and 
furnishes quite a palatable dish. Formerly the fur was used simply 
as a substitute for beaver in hat-making, the skin went through 
similar processes and furnished a good imitation at a greatly reduced 
price ; but latterly the science of fur manipulation has made the 
musquash one of the most staple of all American furs ; and to-day 
we have imitations of seal, otter and mink, produced from the mus- 
quash. ‘The animal is, perhaps, best known to us as the muskrat, 
but this name does not carry sufficient dignity for a creature so 
closely related to the beaver ; the specific name applies to the secre- 
tion contained in two small pouches which in the spring contain a 
thick fluid with a decidedly musky smell. 


The River rat, or Coypu, as it is called by the natives, is in many 
ways the intermediate species between the musquash and the beaver, 
and having been known as the ‘‘Castors of La Plata,’’ might appro- 
priately be named the South American beaver. It inhabits chiefly 
Brazil, Chili and La Plata, where it is very numerous; it is the 
only known representative of the Genus myopofamus, and attains 
nearly half the average size of the beaver, and like the musquash, 
the coypu is very prolific. 


Its introduction to commerce was very recent though of great 
importance, and the fact should not be overlooked that but for its 
contribution to the hatters, our Canadian beaver would not have 
survived so long. All accounts from North America during the 
latter half of last century, which made reference at all to the fur 
trade, agree in stating that the beaver would soon be extinct ; but, 
about 1820, the immense demand was relieved by this new fur, called 
nutria—(from the Spanish, zzfra, the otter.) ‘The fur was plentiful 
and cheap, and sufficiently fine to supplant the beaver for all hatters’ 
purposes, but had the discovery of silk been longer delayed it is 
doubtful whether the increasing demand could have been sustained 
for many years. When the silk hat succeeded to the enviable posi- 
tion which the ‘‘ beaver’’ for centuries had monopolized, it became 
necessary to find other outlets for the skins which hitherto had been 
consumed almost exclusively by the hatters’ trade. We therefore 


36 CASTOROLOGIA. 


find the furriers introducing the manufacture of the tanned or dressed 
skins into their business, and nutria, the skin of the Coypu, is to- 
day among the best imitations of beaver, otter and seal. 


MYOPOTAMUS COYPUS—THE SOUTH AMERICAN BEAVER. 


Before considering the relative features of the beaver, which are 
now in order for a comparative review, it may be better to glance 
for a moment at the curiously anomalous ‘‘ Water hog,’’ which from 
the standpoint of size is first among rodents, and though he is pos- 
sessed of large incisor teeth, he lacks power of jaw, exhibits no 
engineering skill, and cannot worthily be chosen as typical of the 
Order. His affinities are evidently more with the pachyderms, and 
his external features denote much appropriateness in the popular 


CASTOROLOGIA. Sif 


name; the body is massive, the legs moderately long, the toes partly 
webbed, and the skin is scantily covered with rough hair of a brown- 
ish color. Its economy to man seems to be limited to the value of 
its meat as a food supply and it is reputed to be very palatable. 


Having thus reviewed the relative qualities of those members 
most conspicuous in the Order, we can now safely say that none is 
so important to man, none embodies the characteristics more com- 
pletely, and hence, among living representatives none can so well 
sustain the claim of being the type rodent, as the Canadian Beaver. 
In size it almost equals the largest, its ‘‘ chisel-shaped incisors’’ are 
perfect models, its engineering skill surpasses the marvelous, its fur 
is most valuable, and its meat is counted a luxury. It is unique in 
all the animal kingdom in its possession of the so called ‘‘ paddle- 
shaped’ tail, covered with scales instead of fur, and as Buffon, the 
great French naturalist, says: ‘‘ If we consider the anterior parts, 
no animal is more perfectly adapted for terrestrial life, and none so 
well equipped for an aquatic existence, if we look only at the poste- 
rior portions.’’ The contrast of the fore and hind feet is almost 
incredible, the latter being about eight times larger than the former 
and embodying a development peculiar alone to the beaver. All 
these particulars will be carefully treated hereafter, meanwhile we 
will only mention some of the varieties occasionally met with, which 
properly, may now be considered before studying in further detail 
the normal type. 


The tendency to discover differences, apparent or real, on which 
to base new species, is not the highest service of the monographer ; 
but, rather, the effort to harmonise the varieties of nature. That a 
clearer conception may be formed regarding the terms ‘‘species”’ 
and ‘‘ varieties,’’ we will refer to the scholarly treatment given this 
point by Dr. C. Claus. The definition of sfectes, formerly accepted 
by investigators, was that of Linnzeus: ‘‘’Tot numeramus species 
quot ab initio creavit infinitum ens,’’ and was based on the idea of 
‘independently created units.’’ The great lessons, however, of 
Embryology, and the researches of Charles Darwin have made unten- 
able any such fixed statement, and now we have a more comprehen- 


38 CASTOROLOGIA. 


sive definition, and understand the word species to include “all 
living forms which have the most essential properties in common, 
are descended from one another and produce fruitful descendants ;’’ 
though all the facts of natural life cannot be arranged agreeably to 
this conception, and a compromise has often to be effected by the 
creation of a sub-species as a grade between sfeczes and variety, where 
difficulties arise in attempting to draw a sharp line; for varieties 
which have arisen from one species may differ more from one another 
than do distinct natural species ; thus the absence of a positive test, 
leaves the matter to the individual judgment of the observer to decide 
between species, sub-species and varieties. The higher groups of 
systematic zoology are of course freer from these confusions, thus 
the ‘‘order’’ comprises all the genera which conform to a simple 
character, (as for instance, that set forth at the beginning of this 
chapter), and the ‘“‘genus’’ is an assemblage of species having fur- 
ther points of structure incommon. Carl Linnzeus (1707-1778,) was 
the greatest systematizer of zoology, and to him also we are indebted 
for the present form of nomenclature, by which every animal receives 
two names taken from the Latin language, the generic name, which 
is placed first, and the specific name, which together indicate that the 
character of the animal has been sufficiently defined to place itina 
scientific arrangement with the whole system of life. 


”? 


With this digression, we have become ready to appreciate the 
value of the following varieties of the Canadian beaver. ‘They are 
best recorded in Dr. John Richardson’s ‘‘ Fauna Boreali Americana’”’ 
where they are treated in the inverse order of rarity. The first 
variety, ‘‘nigra’’—the black beaver, and although these are not 
accounted rare, they are only found in the proportion of one to ten 
thousand of the normal color. It should here be remarked that the 
natural color is very variable and is most correctly described as of a 
chestnut brown, ranging towards the south to a pale yellowish brown, 
and in the north approaching a blackish brown. ‘The black beaver, 
however, has more than a mere relative coloring and is unquestion- 
ably an evidence of melanism—an excessive development of pigment 
in the skin and its appendages. Hearne recognised the beautiful 
gloss of the fur, and the shading must be described as bluish rather 


CASTOROLOGIA. 39 


than brownish. No difference in other respects is discernible and 
though apparently local and said to be found more plentifully at 
Churchill, Hudson’s Bay, than at any other point, these specimens 
can scarcely constitute a constant variety. 


Next in order comes the spotted beaver—variety ‘‘ varia,’’ 
which Dr. Richardson considered more rare than the preceding, but 
this might be perhaps based on his personal observation which could 
not, necessarily, have been very extensive. He reports that he 
never met with a specimen, which seems rather remarkable as 
the white spotted beavers are not unfrequently met with even 
now, among Hudson’s Bay beavers ; although having no special 
beauty there does not exist the same demand, which tempts the 
capture of the black beaver, whose pelt always fetches a high price. 
The variety ‘‘ varia’’ is doubtless a ‘‘ sport’’ inclining to albinism, 
the white spots generally occur on the throat or along the sides, but 
all other characteristics correspond exactly with the normal type. 


a9) ce 


The white beaver—variety, ‘‘ alba,’’ is incomparably the rarest, 
though it is evidently nothing but an albino condition of the type 
Castor Canadensis. ‘The Indians attach much value to these rare 
skins, which the lucky hunter converts into a medicine bag, and 
although this fate befalls albino skins of many other animals, such 
as the otter, the skunk and the musquash, those of the beaver seem 
to be held in more than ordinary esteem by the Indians, owing per- 
haps to their extreme rarity. Samuel Hearne saw but one in the 
course of twenty years, though Prince Maximillian, in 1843, speak- 
ing of beavers found upon the Yellowstone River says, ‘‘ Yellowish- 
white and pure white are not unfrequently caught on the Yellow- 
stone.’? About twenty years ago, Mr. Harrison Young, of Montreal, 
then connected with the Geological Survey of Canada, while travel- 
ling in the neighbourhood of Little Slave Lake, secured nine pure 
white beaver skins in one parcel. The occurrence, though without 
parallel in Natural History records, suggests the possibility of per- 
petuating a race of white beavers, for the discovery of so large a 
number in one locality would scarcely indicate an ordinary freak of 
nature, but rather implies hereditary qualities. 


40 CASTOROLOGIA. 


Interesting as these speculations may be, the history of the beaver 
in its now familiar form is a matter of much greater importance, and 
with the slight introduction of the subject afforded in this chapter, 
we will proceed to a study of its social life. 


THE LARGEST EXISTING RODENT—HYDROCH-ERUS CAPYBARA. 


LIFE HISTORY OF THE CANADIAN BEAVER. 


THE BEAVER. 


Up in the North if thou sail with me, 
A wonderful creature I’1l show to thee, 
As gentle and mild as a lamb at play, 
Skipping about inthe month of May, 
Yet wise as any old learned sage, 

Who sits turning over a musty page. 


And yonder the peaceable creatures dwell 
Secure in their watery citadel ; 

They know no sorrow, have done no sin ; 
Happy they live *mong kith and kin, 

As happy as living things can be, 

Each in the midst of his family ; 

Ay, there they live, and the hunter wild 
Seeing their social natures mild, 

Seeing how they were kind and good, 
Hath felt his stubborn soul subdued ; 
And the very sight of their young at play, 
Hath put his hunter’s heart away ; 

And a mood of pity hath o’er him crept, 
As he thought of his own dear babes and wept. 


I know ye are but the beavers small, 
Living at peace in your mud wall ; 

I know that ye have no books to teach 
The lore that lies within your reach. 

But what? Five thousand years ago 

Ye knew as much as now ye know; 

And on the banks of streams that sprung 
Forth when the earth itself was young, 
Your wondrous works were formed as true 
For the All-Wise instructed you. 


But man? How hath he pondered on, 
Through the long term of ages gone ; 
And many a cunning book hath writ ; 
Of learning deep and subtle wit ; 
Hath encompassed sea, hath encompassed land, 
Hath built up towers and temples grand, 
Hath travelled far for hidden lore, 
And known what was not known of yore, 
Yet after all, though wise he be, 
He hath no better skill than ye. 
—Mary Howitt. 


FIRST WORK OF THE BEAVER KITTEN. 


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' 


CHAPTER oy. 


THE FAMILY OF BABY BEAVERS—THE BEAVER KITTEN—SUMMER WANDEDR- 
INGS—THE COLONY REASSEMBLES—WOoRK ON THE DAM AND LODGES— 
PROVIDING SUPPLIKS FOR THE WINTER—WINTER EXPERIENCES. 


With the melting of the snow and the disappearance of ice from 
the lakes and ponds, the family of baby beavers are first introduced 
to the wonders of nature which surround them. Earlier than this, 
they can only remember the warm nest in the dark lodge, where, 
like all other little babies, they were fed on milk. But now they 
are strong enough to toddle about, and they are taken for a swim in 
the pond, and allowed to crawl upon the banks. The young family 
usually consists of three or four, and a happy time they have play- 
ing in the water and roaming about the banks in search of dainty 
green shrubs. Itis not long, however, before they are led up the 
stream to another pond, and still higher up to others, where fresh 
delights await them in the increasing variety of fruits and plants. 
As the time wears on the weather gets warmer, and their bed is a 
tuft of soft grass exposed to the silvery light of the moon, from it 
they plunge to the cool depths of the great lakes for refreshing baths, 
while the woods afford an endless assortment of luxuries on which 
the beavers fatten. ‘There is no work to be done and life is a round 
of pleasure; for dreams of the hunters are unknown to the little ones, 
nor do the old ones dread them at this season. Thus the summer 
passes and the little beavers now grown to kittenhood think of the 
cosy lodge down the stream, for the nights are chilly. Soon a start 
is made, and after a long journey the familiar neighbourliood is 
reached. Caution is now most necessary, and the young ones learn 
the cunning ways of the trapper, who sets great store on a fat 
‘* Ah-wa-nesha,’’ as the Indians call the beaver kitten, for perhaps 
some of the happy babies who splashed in the quiet old pond have 


46 CASTOROLOGIA. 


already enriched the hunter. Great changes have taken place since 
the family left in the spring ; the ice has carried away part of the 
dam, and the lodges show sad need of repairs. After a careful 
survey of the surroundings for signs of danger, the work begins, 
and the kittens learn to employ more usefully their sharp cutting 
teeth. The old beavers cut down great trees, which fall with fear- 
ful crashing, the noise echoing through the quiet woods, and driving 
the workers into shelter till all danger is passed ; the young ones now 
set to cutting the smaller branches and swim away with them to the 
dam, where they are placed to advantage and plastered over with 
mud, roots and grass ; while stones are added to keep all tight and 
firm. 


The dam has first to be rebuilt and strengthened, so that the water 
will rise to the required level to enable the colony to swim comfor- 
tably under the ice, and to allow for the storing of a good supply of 
branches. ‘Then the lodge is repaired ; the old bedding cleaned out, 
and together with a supply of branches is heaped upon the roof of 
the lodge and a fresh covering of mud-plaster, the same as used for 
the dam, is laid over all, and thus the home is prepared for the long, 
cold winter. The retreats in the banks—the burrows or ‘‘ washes’’ 
—are enlarged or increased in number, and a full supply of branches 
having been cut and laid in the deep pools near the lodges, all is 
ready for the coming frosts, which soon put an end to work and lock 
the beavers completely under the heavy covering of ice. For some 
time afterwards the beavers swim about under the ice prospecting 
for food, pulling up the great roots of the water-lilies and dragging 
them to the burrows, there to enjoy the feast ; but even this occa- 
sional treat gets monotonous and the confinement has its effect on 
the beavers, who sleep much longer and do less travelling as the 
winter advances. 


Towards the spring the food will sometimes become exhausted, 
and it is then necessary for the old beavers to seek a fresh supply. 
An outlet through the ice has to be effected, and then follows the 
very difficult and dangerous undertaking of travelling over the snow 
and felling some trees ; all the enemies of the beaver are looking with 


CASTOROLOGIA. 47 


keenest expectancy, for his first appearance in the spring, the car- 
nivorous animals are ravenous after their long fast, and the trapper, 
knowing that just now the beaver’s coat is in its best condition, in 
his rounds through the woods his trained eye will quickly discover 
the work of beaver, and the foot marks in the snow tell him what 
little it is necessary to add to his experiences in beaver-trapping. 


STUMP SHOWING CUTTINGS FROM VARIOUS LEVELS OF SNOW. 


48 CASTOROLOGIA. 


The hungry animal will come again to repeat his labors, but it 
must be cunning, indeed, if it would overcome the devices of the 
professional trapper. 


Should the Guardian Spirit of the beaver kitten protect its life 
through the experiences of two more years, the parental nest is left, 
when the creature completes its third year ; and the age of maturity 
brings its responsibilities involving the building of another lodge, 
and the repetition of the various phases of life, which for generations 
have gone on; though each year not only are the families thinned, 
but whole colonies are mercilessly slaughtered in the efforts to 
satisfy the whims of fashion or a thoughtless greed for wealth. 


Sil J 
vant") 7 
Ui € i (Be 


THE LARGE YELLOW POND LILY. 
(Nuphar Advena.) 


SHOWING THE RHIZOME OR ROOT-STEM ON WHICH THE BEAVER FEEDS. 


GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. 


““When we had proceeded more than half 
way over the dam, which was a full mile in 
length, we came to an aged Indian, his arms 
folded across his breast, with a pensive count- 
enance looking at the beavers swimming in the 
water, and carrying their winter’s provisions to 
their houses. . . . . . He invited us to pass 
the night at his tent which was close by ; the 
sun was low and we accepted the offer.” 

“T have told you that we believe in years 
long passed away, the great spirit was angry 
with the beaver, and ordered Weesaukejauk 
(the hatter) to drive them all from the dry land 
into the water, and they became and continue 
very numerous ; but the great spirit has been 
and now is very angry with them, and they are 
now all to be destroyed. About ten winters ago 
Weesaukejauk showed to our brethren the 
Nepissings and Algonquins the secret of their 
destruction ; that all of them were infatuated 
with the love of the castoreum of their own spe- 
cies, and more fond of it than we are of fire 
water. Weare now killing the beaver without 
any labour; we are now rich, but shall soon be 
poor, for when the beaver are destroyed we have 
nothing to depend on to purchase what we want 
for our families; strangers now overrun our 
country with their iron traps, and we and they 
will soon be poor.”’ 


—MS. Notes by David Thompson, 1794. 


CHAPTER VI. 

NORTH AMERICA THE FORMER HABITAT OF THE INDIAN AND THE BEAVER— 
THE HuDSON RIVER, THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER AND HUDSON’S 
STRAIT, THE THREE AVENUES OF ASSAULT—THE COASTS OF THE 
PACIFIC AND THE ARCTIC DISCOVERED—GRADUAL RETREAT OF THE 
BEAVER TO THE UPPER TRIBUTARIES—HIS Last HOME, THE QUIET 
POOLS ALONG THE HEIGHTS OF LAND. 


The distribution of the beaverin North America was greater than 
that of any other animal, and might be considered as co-extensive 
with that of the Indian. The southern boundaries were the Gulf of 
Mexico and the Rio Grande, while from the Atlantic to the Pacific 
it ranged northwards to the region of perpetual snow. Of course 
within this vast territory there were places, such as the desert and 
prairie country, where the creature was but little known, while also 
there were the great water districts of the Hudson’s Bay and the 
Saskatchewan River, the St. Lawrence River and the Mississippi 
where the beavers overran the country. The adventurers who 
braved the Atlantic in early times, did so not to hunt or traffic, but 
to gather gold and other concrete riches, and the presence of fur 
bearing animals more or less plentifully, was a matter of small con- 
cern to: them. 


Coincident with the period of the Renaissance in Europe, 
however, commerce revived, and new life quickened enterprises of 
many kinds, among which was the project to discover a short route 
to Carthay. ‘The market was thus ready for fresh fields of supply 
and companies were soon organized to collect the rich peltries offered 
by the newly discovered world. England entered on the north by 
Hudson’s Strait and planted her colonies over the North-West ; 
France colonized the St. Lawrence, while the Dutch made the Hud- 
son River their approach to the interior. The Indian had been the 


52 CASTOROLOGIA. 


prudent husbander of the beaver, and by early accounts the two 
seemed to have lived on remarkably intimate terms, as it is stated 
that frequently colonies of beavers would be found within a short 
distance of the Indian villages. It was easily possible for the Indian 
to supply all his wants both of food and clothing from the near 
beaver colony without disturbing them at all, for there would always 
be those who wandered from the colony far enough to permit of 
their destruction without giving the least alarm to their companions. 


The opportunity of obtaining from the white man achoice of his 
best possessions in return for the discarded beaver coat, or for any 
surplus beaver skins then about the camp, was an era exceeding 
even the dreams of life in the ‘‘land of the setting sun.’’ Imagine 
what it meant to the Indian to become the owner for the first time 
in his history,of a knife, a file, or even a needle ; and when he could 
in exchange for the easily gotten beaver-pelt possess not only some 
of the wonderful manufactures of civilization, but clothe him- 
self in the gorgeous scarlet cloth which to his mind was a robe 
fit to appear in before the Manitou on the day when he would join 
the departed spirits of his tribe ; nor should we be surprised that the 
credulous Indian thought his white brother a demi-god, to bring such 
treasures and ask so little in return. The carving of the wampum 
bead and the laborious shaping of implements from the ill-adapted 
bone or stone, were soon doomed to be lost arts. But above all other 
acquisitions, however, was the introduction of the gun which so far 
surpassed the arrow and the spear, that these soon became the toys 
for the prattling child, while the sire displayed the magic contrivance 
which embodied the very spirit of death, What to him were a hun- 
dred beaver skins compared with the possession of a gun, though 
even then the white man held fast the key and claimed goodly toll 
for powder and shot. Alas, that the avaricious trader should not 
have been satisfied with the control he exercised in this way over the 
Indian, but among his good gifts should have brought a curse so 
dreadful in its records, that, while a red-skinned brother lives, we 
should never cease the attempt to redress the awful wrong our race 
has done, by using the fatal influence of ‘‘ fire water’’ to obtain a 
little worldly gain. 


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46 Chagovamigon 


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GRAND ESPACE DE TERRE 
2pDE LABRADOR OU DES ESKIMAUS” 


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Explication des Marques 


Sone des Villes Francotses ou Anatlotses-+--- >" 
Sone des Fillages Analots ou Frangots- +--+: 
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CASTOROLOGIA. Sy, 


The great slaughter began with the establishment of the first fur 
trading post in 1604, when Champlain planted his colonists at Que- 
bec, and followed with other settlements on the St. Lawrence, which, 
from subsequent experience proves to have been the natural highway 
to the richest fields on the continent. 


Up the Cataraqui to the chain of lakes—‘‘ Ontario, or Fronte- 
nac,’’ ‘‘ Errie, or DeConti,’’ and the lakes of ‘‘ the Hurons’’ and “‘ the 
Ilinois’’—the trappers and traders pressed ; and though, as appears 
in the accompanying map, the country contained many beaver- 
reserves of the Iroquois and other tribes friendly to the French, these 
must soon have been depopulated. 


The Dutch from New Amsterdam and the neighborhood of the 
Hudson River, traded also into the lake district, and helped mate- 
rially to thin the numbers of the beavers, from which followed 
contention and conflicts with those who tried to control the Indian 
trade in the rich peltries. 


On the north, the Company of Adventurers Trading into Hud- 
son’s Bay held absolute sway over an immense district, till the de- 
creasing profits resulting from competition on the Cataraqui route, 
suggested a search for new fields ; when from Montreal expeditions 
were furnished, which, by way of the grand river of the ‘‘ Outawas,”’ 
pressed westward to the Pacific, and northward to the Arctic Ocean, 
thereby extending the operations of the beaver hunter, and greatly 
increasing the profits of the traders, who found many quarters still 
in a state of primitive savagery, though all had been indirectly en- 
riching the Hudson’s Bay Company. 


Now arose the struggle to break the monopoly, which had so 
long been undisputed, and the worst consequences followed the 
efforts to win the patronage of the Indians; for not only was a 
reckless slaughter of the beavers instituted, but robberies and blood- 
shed frequently accompanied the riotous meeting of rival traders. 
No toleration, no sense of justice, no thought of the inevitable re- 
sults which would fellow their open policy of extermination ; though 


58 CASTOROLOGIA. 


many posts were scarcely established before the entire neighbour- 
hood was destitute of beavers, and the position was abandoned as 
useless. The period of the fiercest contest was the first sixty years 
following the British possession of Canada—r1760 to 1820—and these 
six decades, representing the sovereignty of George III, embody the 
true romance of our history, when the heterogeneous elements of our 
country wore away past differences and settled into peaceful, loyal, 
national life. "The range of beavers though still vast, had become 
unprofitable as compared with former days, and compromises were 
now effected, whereby the old policy of extermination disappeared, 
and an intelligent supervision of the requirements necessary to per- 
petuate the animal, was instituted by the Hudson’s Bay Company, 


MAP SHOWING DISTRIBUTION OF BEAVER—ABOUT 1850. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 59 


who again became the great monopolists of the beaver trade. But 
the height of fame had been reached, and the demand, once depen- 
dent solely on the beaver, was now supplied from several sources, 
if not altogether supplanted by the introduction of silk. 


Some colonies still linger in the United States, on the slopes of 
the Rocky Mountains, and are sparcely scattered over the continent, 
—occupying mostly the upper tributaries of our great waterways— 
as shown by the shaded portion on the foregoing map. 


The question is often asked, ‘‘ Where, to-day, are beavers to be 
found in their primitive state ?’’ and the answer is not difficult to 
give, for the beaver is of slow locomotion on land, and its habits 
confine it very closely to the neighborhood of its birth ; it keeps to 
the water courses, and as the hunters follow, it recedes farther up the 
streams, till on the height of land, the quiet lakes and pools offer a 
last retreat, but alas, no sanctuary ; and the white man with his 
‘‘ fire waggon’’ dashes through the woods, changing as if by magic 
the country through which he passes, with utter disregard for the 
quiet denizens of the forest. 


As to the ultimate destruction of the beaver no possible question 
can exist, and the evidences of approaching extermination can be 
seen only too plainly in the miles of territory exhibiting the decayed 
stump, the broken dam and deserted lodge. The passing bear or 
wolverine tears open the lodge, partly in the vain hope of finding a 
meal, partly from habit ; the rising waters float the logs away, while 
the drifting ice in fall and spring gradually destroy the dam till 
within a decade, where once the busy colony spent their happy 
domestic lives, no sign remains of all their wondrous toil. 


Along the watershed, between the Hudson’s Bay and the St. 
Lawrence ; in the upper waters of the Frazer and Peace Rivers, and 
along the Rocky Mountain range may be considered the last homes 
of the beaver. 


THE ADVANCE OF CIVILIZATION. 


ENGINEERING ACCOMPLISHMENTS. 


‘Most remarkable among rodents for instinct 
and intelligence, unquestionably stands the bea- 
ver. Indeed, there is no animal—not even ex- 
cepting the ants and bees—where instinct has 
risen to a higher level of far-reaching adapta- 
tion to certain constant conditions of environ- 
ment, or where faculties, undoubtedly instinc- 
tive, are more puzzlingly wrought up with facul- 
ties no less undoubtedly intelligent.”’ 

“Ttis truly an astonishing fact that animals 
should engage in such vast architectural labors 
with what appears to be the deliberate purpose 
of securing, by such very artificial means, the 
special benefits that arise from their high en- 
gineering skill. So astonishing, indeed, does 
this fact appear, that as sober-minded interpre- 
ters of fact we would fain look for some expla- 
nation which would not necessitate the infer- 
ence that these actions are due to any intelligent 
appreciation, either of the benefits that arise 
from the labor, or the hydrostatic principles to 
which this labor so clearly refers.”’ 


—George J. Romanes, M.A., LL.D., F.R.S. 


CHAPTER VII. 


TREE FELLING AND LoG ROLLING—THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE LODGE AND 
BURROWS—VARIETIES OF DAM, AND METHODS OF BUILDING—THE 
CANAL, ITS DEVELOPMENT AND USES. 


If no exaggerations had ever appeared in connection with the 
beaver, except those referring to his performances in felling trees, 
the stock of these alone would have been sufficient to damage the 
reputation of Natural History writers ; for the accomplishment of 
applying their cutting teeth to the trunk of a tree, in much the same 
manner as a rat will cut the corners of cupboard doors, has been 
magnified and embellished beyond recognition. ‘The beaver is sup- 
posed to be able to fell the tree in any direction he chooses, thus 
overcoming the laws of gravitation, and great stress is laid on the 
fact that ‘‘ he always makes the tree fall towards the water ;’’ yet, 
it is generally overlooked, that trees ~rowing near water naturally 
incline with the sloping of the banks towards the waters, and that 
the development of branches and foliage is greater in the direction 
of the open space over the water. 


The most elaborate details concerning these statements are to be 
found in a little volume, published in 1738, entitled ‘‘ Avantures du 
Sr. C. LeBeau.’’ It is utterly incomprehensible how such accounts 
could have had birth ; and when those who are supposed to record 
actual experiences, write such fabulous nonsense, can it be won- 
dered that the masses who never have had the opportunity of dis- 
proving the statements, have accepted them for what they claim to 
be, that is, the evidence of an eye witness. 


LeBeau, not satisfied with giving his pen absolute license, has 
given equal latitude to the pencil, and the accompanying plate re- 
produced from the original engraving, shows clearly that the artist 


XY 


64 CASTOROLOGIA. 


lacked not the power of illustrating. It is almost necessary to point 
out some of the nice details to ensure an appreciation of the work, 
hence the following short explanation : 


The three mounds inthe distance are supposed to represent 
beaver lodges, for the accommodation of say half a dozen beavers 
each, and the highly finished surface, intended to show the result of 
plastering, is overdone in a most exaggerated degree. Of the various 
expressions given to the beavers as they sport about in the water 
(not to speak of those in the foreground) it is only necessary to quote 
LeBeau’s description of the appearance of the animal: ‘‘Its body 
much longer than thick, is nearly the size of our large terrier dogs, 
with its stomach flattened ; the shape of its head is like that of the 
rat, having eyes and ears, if they were not flattened, almost like 
that of a cat, and about three times as large as the latter ; it has also 
the cheeks and mouth of a hare.”’ 


The dam naturally forms a very important feature in the picture, 
and the marvellous trellis work which divides the distant from the 
near water, is intended to enlighten those who seek for first-hand 
information, whereas nothing could be more remote from the truth. 
As to the group in the foreground, we will let LeBeau tell the story 
himself :— 


‘“One hour was spent while our repast was being prepared, 
whilst I decided against the wishes of my savages to go fora walk 
on the banks of the river, in the hope of perhaps seeing some beavers 
at work there. 


‘‘T was not mistaken in this idea, but, in order to approach 
more closely a place where on landing I had remarked some large 
trees half cut through, I advanced quietly on all fours, to see with- 
out being seen, these beautiful born architects, of whom I had heard 
so many marvels. I was already quite close when a certain noise 
that I heard, exciting my curiosity more and more, induced me to 
stand upright behind a large tree, to see more at my ease what 
caused it. 


NOISIA 


S 


NO'THAUVIN S 


‘ 


NVA 


tr 


CASTOROLOGIA. 67 


‘“TIt was then that without moving from my place, I saw quite a 
hundred of these animals occupied on a work as admirable as it was 
surprising. There were a dozen of them, who pressing close to 
one another and standing on their hind feet were sawing, or rather 
cutting with their teeth a large tree about 12 feet in circumference, 
whilst more than fifty others were occupied in cutting and trim- 
ming the branches of another tree already fallen. 


“It was a pleasure to me to see the cleverness with which they 
conducted these branches by swimming. One moment I saw them 
jumping and rolling over these materials, then I could no longer 
see either branches or beavers, and in some few moments, I per- 
ceived them in still greater numbers on the surface of the waves, 
holding as if in anger these same branches which had fallen to them, 
and with which they dived to the bottom of the river. 


‘The most amusing part to me was to see two seated on their 
tails, solely occupied in watching the workers and in preventing 
any advance on the side that the tree which they were cutting 
ought to fall. Several others a little farther off, seemed to me to act 
as inspectors or overseers to direct the work, it might be in hurrying 
the idle, or helping to roll away stones or take away the cuttings 
which sometimes impeded the workers too much, or in reloading 
those who let the mortar fall, while others finally who represented 
masons, prepared this same mortar mixed with rich earth which 
others had brought to them from the bottom of the river, and a 
little gravel collected on the bank. 


“This gravel well hardened, or beaten together in this clay as 
much by their tails as by their feet, would afterwards become hard 
and keep sound at the bottom of the water as a cement capable of 
strengthening their dams, and a mortar fit to build their lodges 
with.”’ 


The exactness with which the various processes are here recounted 
is distressing to those who have watched in vain to see the beavers 
at work, for they are intensely shy; but the statement that ‘‘ after 


68 CASTOROLOGIA. 


viewing the tree from every side the animal advances and begins 
cutting at the side opposite to that on which it is to fall,” is 
hardly borne out by the curiously carved stump illustrated in 
this chapter. Then accounts are so frequently repeated that “‘ the 
beaver never allows a tree to ‘ fork’ in falling,’’ that there appears 
to be some novelty in the discovery within a small area, of three 


STUMP SHOWING THAT METHODS OF CUTTING DISAGREE. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 69 


trees completely cut through by the beaver, yet so interlocked 
in the branches of neighboring trees, as to preclude the possibility 
of their falling. Cases have even been observed where the beaver, 
not undaunted by a first failure to secure the tender branches 
and young twigs, has cut the tree through a second time, only to 
experience another failure. Apart from the audacity of so small 
an animal attempting to fell trees having a circumference of from 
thirty to fifty inches or more, and towering in the forests, even 
to a hundred feet in height, there is less that is marvelous in 
this than in any of hisother works. Mr. A. D. Bartlett, the careful 
guardian of the many interesting occupants of the Zoological Gar- 
dens, Regent’s Park, London, England, whose residence is next to 
the beaver’s enclosure, has recorded with the utmost exactness the 
methods of tree-felling, in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society 
of London, November, 1862, and his observations are so invaluable 
to a just appreciation of the skill exercised in this, the first and sim- 
plest performance of the beaver, that it might be well to give his 
remarks at length. He says :— 


‘‘ During one of the heavy storms of wind and rain that prevailed 
during the last month a large willow-tree was partly blown down. 
‘The limbs and branches of this fallen tree were given to many of the 
animals, and to them proved to be a very acceptable windfall. ‘To 
the beaver, however, I wish to direct especial attention, as this ani- 
mal has exhibited in a remarkable manner some of his natural habits 
and intelligence. One of the largest limbs cf the tree, upwards of 
12 feet long, was firmly fixed in the ground, in the beaver’s enclo- 
sure, in a nearly upright position, at about twelve o’clock on Satur- 
day last. ‘The beaver visited the spot soon afterwards, and walking 
round this large limb, which measured 30 inches circumference, 
commenced to bite off the bark about 12 inches above the ground, 
and afterwards to gnaw into the wood itself. ‘The rapid progress 
was (to all who witnessed it) most astonishing. ‘The animal labored 
hard, and appeared to exert his whole strength, leaving off for a 
few minutes apparently to rest and look upwards, as if to consider 
which way the tree was to fall. Now and then he left off and went 
into his pond, which was about three feet from the base of the tree, 


7O CASTOROLOGIA. 


as if to take a refreshing bath. Again he came out with renewed 
energy, and with his powerful teeth gouged away all round the 
trunk. ‘This process continued till about four o’clock, when sud- 
denly he left off and came hastily towards the iron fence, to the 
surprise of those who were watching his movements. The cause of 
this interruption was soon explained ; he had heard in the distance 
the sound of the wheelbarrow, which, as usual, is brought daily to 
his paddock, and from which he was anxiously waiting to receive 
his supper. Not wishing to disappoint the animal, but at the same 
time regretting that he was thus unexpectedly stopped in his deter- 
mination to bring down this massive piece of timber, his usual 
allowance of carrots and bread were given to him; and from this 
time until half-past five he was engaged in taking his meal and 
swimming about in his pond. At half-past five, however, he returned 
to his tree, which by this time was reduced in the centre to about 
two inches in diameter. ‘To this portion he applied his teeth with 
great earnestness, and in ten minutes afterwards it fell suddenly 
with great force upon the ground. 


‘‘Tt was an interesting sight to witness the adroit and skilful 
manner in which the last bite or two were given on the side on which 
the tree fell, and the nimble movement of the animal to the opposite 
side at the moment, evidently to avoid being crushed beneath it. 
Upon examining the end of the separated tree, it was found that 
only one inch in diameter was uncut; and it was of course due to 
the nearly erect position in which the tree was put into the ground 
that it stood balanced, as it were, upon this slender stem. After 
carefully walking along its entire length as it lay on the ground, 
and examining every part, he commenced to cut off about two feet 
of its length, and by seven o’clock the next morning he had divided 
it into three pieces : two of these he had removed into the pond, and 
one was used in the under part of his house. 


‘“’The beaver, the subject of the foregoing remarks, was presented 
to the Society by the Hudson’s Bay Company, in the autumn of 
1861, and was probably then about six months old. It is, no doubt, 
less vigorous than the large wild animals of this species, who would, 


CASTOROLOGIA, 71 


in all probability, bring down trees of much larger dimensions in a 
shorter time. In fact, it was evident that our beaver was a novice 
in the undertaking, as he more than once slipped and rolled over on 
his back in his eagerness to accomplish the task. It was impossible 
to witness the actions of this animal without being struck by the 
amount of skill and intelligence exhibited. When the space cut 
through towards the centre was too narrow to admit its head, its 
teeth were applied above and below so as to increase the width from 
the outside towards the centre, until the remaining parts above and 
below formed two cones, the apices of which joined in the middle. 
Again and again the animal left off gnawing, and, standing upright 
on its hind legs, rested its front feet on the upper part of the tree, 
as if to feel whether it was on the move. ‘This showed clearly that 
the creature knew exactly what it was about.”’ 

Another keen observer was Captain Bonneville, who among his 
adventures in the Rockies and Far West, records his observations 
on the beaver, and refers thus to the subject :— 


‘‘T have often seen trees, measuring eighteen inches in diameter, 
at the places where they have been cut through by the beaver, but 
they lay in all directions and often very inconveniently for the after 
purposes of the animal. In fact, so little ingenuity do they at times 
display in this particular, that at one of our camps at Snake River, 
a beaver was found with its head wedged into the cut which it had 
made, the tree having fallen upon him and held him prisoner until 
ne died.” 


It will naturally be surmised that the chips cut during the tree- 
felling, must be in some cases of considerable size, but one can 
scarcely realize that many of the largest measure nine inches in 
length. These doubtless, are the work of fully adult beavers, whose 
knowledge of felling would be thoroughly matured. The stump in 
such cases is simply marvelous to contemplate, for the cutting power 
exhibited by so small an animal seems scarcely credible. Cuts many 
inches in length, sharply marking the width of the teeth give evi- 
dence of their wonderful adaptability, for no better work could be 


72 CASTOROLOGIA. 


accomplished by a most highly finished steel cutting tool, wielded 
by a muscular human arm. 


The primary object of felling trees is to secure a supply of branches 
for the winter, when no other vegetable substance is obtainable. 
‘The fallen tree is stripped of its branches, and the stem is then cut 
into sections and rolled in good lumbering fashion into the pond ; 
the site of the roll-way is generally a well marked feature in the 
landscape. ‘The use to which these logs and the ‘‘ whittle sticks’’ 
are turned, introduces the next accomplishment, the building of the 
lodge. 


The beaver lodge is generally included in the list of marvels re- 
served for the investigation of those who visit beaver districts, and 
yet no greater disappointment awaits the enquirer than the first 
inspection of one. Somehow the minds of all lovers of Natural 
History become affected by the fabulous accounts concerning this 
structure, and it is a shock to stand for the first time before a pile of 
twigs, branches and logs, heaped in disorder on a small dome of 
mud, and to learn that this constitutes the famous lodge. Of course 
the superficial glance does not convey all that can be learnt in con- 
nection with this work, but it does most completely disillusionize 
the mind. On breaking through the upper walls, the interior is 
found to be similar to the general type of an animal’s sleeping apart- 
ment, and has scarcely a distinguishing characteristic. 


The theory is now generally accepted that the lodge is a deve- 
lopment of the burrow or ‘‘wash’’ in the banks, and this gives 
another evidence of a close relationship between the beaver and 
the musquash. Starting with the simple burrow, the next step is 
the accumulation of logs and branches about its entrance, form- 
ing what is called a ‘‘ bank-lodge.’’ In places where the water 
is shallow towards the shores, a great advantage would be derived 
from extending this artificial covering of brush-wood, so that in 
time a natural evolution of the lodge disconnected entirely from 
the shore would take place, and form an independent and 
very convenient refuge from its landward enemies. Before leav- 


sat cats 
ee aed 


THE BEAVER CANAL. 


FROM LEWIS H. MORGAN’S ‘‘ THE AMERICAN BEAVER AND HIS WORKS.”’ 


CASTOROLOGIA. As 


ing the subject we will quote the remarks of Mr. S. F. Baird, 
one of America’s best informed naturalists; he says: ‘‘ In my ob- 
servations I have never seen the beaver lodge assume the marvelous 
features usually ascribed to it, and any I have met with can only be 
described as resembling an irregular pile of wood cuttings.’’ Cer- 
tainly anything approaching the exquisite beauty of workmanship 
which the common birds of our neighborhood display, need not be 
looked for, and in comparison with the nest-building accomplish- 
ments exhibited by the Oriole (/cferus Baltimore), the domestic 
arrangements of the beaver must be ranked among the ordinary 
works of lower intelligence. 


But there are still points to consider in which the character of 
the beaver becomes most dignified, and the closer these matters are 
studied, the more admiration and wonder they excite. A beaver 
dam examined in the most matter of fact way, introduces a chain of 
thought destined to raise our esteem of the animal to the highest 
degree.. Why should a dam be constructed at all? Undoubtedly, 
the object of the dam is to secure more water, and to preserve it for | 
use through seasons when a natural supply cannot be relied on, and 
simple as the case may appear, it involves some most interesting 
points of hydraulic engineering, and presents not a few problems for 
discussion. 


In the first place the beaver’s power of transporting materials is 
decidedly limited, and therefore the dam must be built mainly of 
such stuff as the locality readily affords ; so that besides the familiar 
form constructed chiefly of branches (as in the beaver enclosure on 
the Marquis of Bute’s estate), there are grass, sand and mud struc- 
tures, the last of which is depicted in the frontispiece of this volume. 


The best explanation of what might have constituted the primi- 
tive form, is the circumstance of the felled tree blocking the stream, 
and in itself practically forming a dam, for the ordinary drift of the 
stream would soon fill in the smaller interstices, and thus the level 
of the water would be raised and maintained, answering every re- 
quirement of the colony. But there is an immense advance on this 


76 CASTOROLOGIA. 


theory in the construction of a mud-dam, for in this case the whole 
plan has to be conceived and perfected by the beaver. Every particle 
of material employed in a work needing hundreds of cubic yards, is 
gathered and placed by the small, though nimble fore feet of the 
beaver, and to complete the task, requires the highest skill and 
all the perseverance the animal has ever been supposed to possess. 
To enumerate the various forms assumed by the dam would be to 
catalogue almost every change of landscape effect, for the beaver 
always adapts himself to his situation, and most particularly in the 
case of the dam. 


Mr. Lewis H. Morgan in his book ‘‘ The American Beaver and 
his Works,”’ gives special prominence to the various forms assumed 
by the dam, and devotes over fifty pages to this feature alone, his 
treatment being most interesting, yet by no means exhausting all 
that could be said. 


One other accomplishment, which by some is considered more 
extraordinary than all the other works, is the formation of the canal. 
The evolution of this is, however, more easily traced and understood, 
nor does it involve such difficulties, nor exact such skill as the build- 
ing of the lodge and the construction of the dam, though the perse- 
verance of the animal is clearly exhibited in this undertaking. 


Admitting the fact that the beaver continually uses the same 
path from the water to the woods, both going and returning, and 
thus cuts or wears away the bank into a regular rut or path, into 
which the water follows and helps to wash away a little earth every 
time the path is used, the possible beginnings of the canal may be 
seen. It must not, however, be supposed that this explanation 
exhausts all the skill necessary to account for the canal ; it only 
suggests a rational origin for the work, and when it is known that 
in the log roll-way (referred to at the commencement of this chapter), 
the beaver carefully clears away every obstruction of stick or stone, 
it is only applying the same idea on a larger scale to the pathway 
which he invariably uses and which soon becomes a waterway or 
canal. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 77 


Though the beaver-canal is not so popularly known, and is 
more easily reconciled with instinct, it must not be supposed that 
it is a minor feature in the performances of this animal; it is 
almost incredible that a work so apparently artificial, could have 
remained unnoticed till 1868, when Mr. Morgan published his 
valuable notes, so amply illustrating the works of the American 
Beaver. 


In 1885, was added the testimony of the Marquis of Lorne, 
who, more perhaps than any of our Governors, made himself ac- 
quainted with our Dominion, and acquired an admiration for the 
Canadian Beaver. In his beautifully edited volume, ‘‘ Canadian 
Pictures, with Pen and Pencil,’’ he devotes several pages to the 
beaver, and therein records his personal observations of the beaver- 
canal. He says: 


‘‘TIn reaches containing islands, I have seen the island cut clean 
through by a water-ditch, so that the animals and their young, 
could swim from the pool on one side of the island to that on the 
ether. 


A slightly different form is that in which a waterway is kept 
open through the beaver meadows, but this is doubtless accounted 
for by the same faculty for cleaning the roll-ways and paths. When 
the colony has been settled quietly for many years and has cut all 
the desirable trees close at hand, and further supplies are sometimes 
hundreds of yards away, the necessity for clear roll-ways and good 
canals is obvious. 


Sh 


ER CHIP 


BEAV. 


ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS. 


THE BEAVER MEADOW. 


*Tis a meadow green as an emerald’s heart, 
In the heart of an emerald wood, 

And a crystal stream doth idle and dart, 
Through the sun-swept solitude. 

The orioles glance like flashes of fire 
From foliaged limb to limb, 

And the harsh frogs pipe in a ceaseless choir 
From the marsh when day grows dim. 


When the grey cold dawn in her robes of mist, 
O’er meadow and wood and stream, 

T.ooks forth from her tower of amethyst, 
She sees the wild duck gleam 

In the slender reeds that have waded out, 
Far out in the sinuous brook, 

And she hears the loon, like a wary scout, 

_ Shrill keen from some secret nook. 


Long years ago, when our fathers first, 
Fearless and full of hope, 
With love of venture and wealth athirst, 
O’er river and mountain slope 
To this woodland came, a lakelet lay 
As bright as a burnished shield, 
Where now the rivulet waters play, 
And the loud frogs pipe concealed. 


And a wondrous town with its sunward domes 
And wonderful people stood 
Where these deep-mouthed frogs have now their homes 
And the wild ducks lurk and brood. 
Not the carven fronts nor the lordly halls 
Of the ancient Aztec sway, 
More wonderful were than the stately walls 
Of this town now passed away. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 8I 


Not a listless brain, nor an idle hand 
Was there in all that town, 
But strong defenses the people planned 
And hewed the great trees down. 
The rippling river, with wondrous art, 
In barriers huge they pent 
And made their homes in the new lake’s heart 
And dwelt therein content. 


But woe to the town and its people all, 
Earth giveth no deathless joy ! 
Wherever the white man’s foot doth fall 
The weak it doth destroy. 
The merciless, covetous Spanish horde 
Who came to the Aztec land 
Put its people and chiefs to the ruthless sword, 
Its towns to the blazing brand. 


And here in this northern wilderness 
This wonderful beaver town 

That baffled the elemental stress, 
Before our sires went down. 

Its stately domes and its barriers vast, 
Its sinuous streets, its lake 

The hunters destroyed and overcast 
For a little riches sake. 


They slaughtered the noble beaver kings 
And loosened the fettered stream, 

And now the reeds, like a thousand strings, 
With music as in a dream 

In the night wind mourn the departed lake 
And the stately beaver town, 

While the rippling waves in the rushes break, 
As the stream goes eddying down. 


And musing here, on the grassy site 
Of the beaver colony, 
My soul is carried in fancy’s flight 
To the site of Ville-Marie, 
Where the Hochelagans, or ‘‘ beaver race 
Of Indians’’ dwelt of old, 
Their name renowned from their mountain’s base 
To where the ocean rolled. 


82 


CASTOROLOGIA. 


‘‘ Hochelaga,’’ the beaver meadow meant, 

And where the beaver dwelt, 

Later, the Frenchman pitched his tent 
And before heaven knelt. 

The wondrous skill and the council sage 
And the beaver’s love of toil 

Became as well his heritage, 
As the broad and fertile soil. 


So honor be to the beaver’s name, 
And praise to the beaver’s skill, 

And in the labors that make for fame 
May we all be beavers still. 

This emerald mead in the emerald heart 
Of afair umbrageous grove, 

Of the nation’s life is a glorious part, 
And merits its purest love. 


—Arthur Weir. 


CO ® 
NOAM fa WANS 
Mire att LI waa, SY 
FUR TRADERS ‘‘ SQUATTING’’ ON THE PRAIRIE NEAR 
FORT GARRY, 1876, 


NOW THE CITY OF WINNIPEG. 


CHAPTER WVIIE 


BEAVER MEAT, A STAPLE Foop SUPPLY — BEAVER COATS, MITTENS AND 
MoccasINS—THE Fat AS AN OINTMENT—LUXURIOUS USES OF CAS- 
TOREUM—BEAVER CHISELS—THE VALUE OF THE BEAVER-POND, AND 
BEAVER-MEADOW—BEAVER TRADE THE FOUNDATION OF OUR PRE- 


SENT COMMERCIAL GREATNESS. 


Man’s first and constant need is food, and in all times and places, 
the question as to food supply must be settled before other concerns 
are entertained. ‘The lower animals almost invariably exhibit a 
complete disregard in the matter of preserving supplies ; they con- 
sume at sight, all that it is possible for them to do, even to glutton- 
ous waste, and then, are prepared to face starvation before another 
gorge is obtainable. In this respect we find the lower orders of 
mankind very similar, and it marks the advancing scale of develop- 
ment, when any race shows signs of storing food or preserving a food 
supply. The Indian of North America makes an exceedingly inter- 
esting ethnological study, for his ways are singularly typical, and 
amply repay investigation. ‘Though constituting one grand race, the 
many varieties of climate and circumstance with which he has had 
to contend, produce marked difference of character. We have already 
referred to some of the distinguishing characteristics of the Indian 
tribes, and those which now claim our attention are the settled tribes 
of the northern districts. It is of these that writers have recorded 
the fact of their settlements being in close proximity to the beaver 
colonies, and the great economy of the beaver to them is a subject 
of much importance. 


Man as an omnivorous feeder requires a varied diet, and while 
the vegetable kingdom contributes very largely to his sustenance, he 
has ever been dependent on herbivorous animals for a sufficient pro- 


84. CASTOROLOGIA. 


portion of meat to keep him healthy and help to develope his 
strength. This was the cause why primitive man was almost invaria- 
bly a hunter, and the uses he has made of the skin and other parts 
have been incidental to his first want, that of meat. It must then be 
evident that those animals which most conveniently supply the im- 
perative demand for meat are of first importance to man, and in this 
category we find the beaver serving pre-eminently the wants of the 
Indian and the early travellers in America. It is well to remember 
that the highways of America were until very lately her waterways ; 
the birch bark canoe having accomplished the long journey from 
Montreal to the Arctic Ocean, by way of the Ottawa and French 
rivers, the Saskatchewan and the Mackenzie ; and it is not too much 
to assert that this and many other similar accomplishments depended 
for their success on the supply of beaver meat obtainable by the way. 


Testimony is so universally favorable as to the excellent quality 
of the meat, that it would be heresy to dispute its merits, particu- 
larly as its reputation was earned centuries ago in Europe, and in 
America there exists a kind of proof which is very convincing. 
It is said, in regard to the methods of preparing the dish for 
table, that the favorite plan was to roast the animal in the skin, and 
when there were plenty of beavers to be had, it did not seem to have 
attracted the attention of the traders, that a few skins were thus 
destroyed by their ‘‘ couriers ;’’ but in later days, when competition 
increased as the beavers decreased, every skin was in eager demand, 
and consequently we find frequent mention of the difficulty to prevent 
the destruction of the skin, by roasting it together with the carcass. 


The meat is tender, and at most seasons very sweet tasted, not 
unlike pork; and so generally esteemed, that even now, it is often 
sold at our markets and not infrequently it appears on the “‘ bill of 
fare’’ in country hotels. In earlier times it was dried and pounded 
to meal or powder, for convenience of carriage and preservation. 


The members of the ‘‘ Beaver Club’’ in Montreal, used to serve a 
roasted beaver at their banquets, with all the dignity observed in 
serving the royal dishes in the old baronial days of England. The 


CASTOROLOGIA. 85 


early missionaries found in the beaver a valuable addition to their 
“Lenten dietary,’’ but it is a pity that this privilege should have 
required the belief that the animal lived on fish, for many a one 
has been destroyed, and the attractions of his skillful labor been 
effaced, under the supposition that it was necessary to exterminate 
the beaver in order to preserve the fish. 


Thus far the meat generally, has been referred to without re- 
garding the delicious morsel which the tail affords. To recognise 
the high degree in which this dish was appreciated, it is necessary 
to imagine the limited choice of food, to which the trader was forced 
to submit while away from civilization, and also to make allowances 
for the stimulating effect an open-air life would have on the ap- 
petite. The flavor and appearance resemble that of the choicest 
bacon, and it is worthy to rank with most modern luxuries, while it 
may safely be said, that the forests do not furnish its equal as a 
delicacy. It now only remains to add that in several cases it 
has happened among the men of trading parties, whose provi- 
sions were all exhausted, that the bales of beaver skins, have 
been opened and divided as rations, and when roasted, they 
appeared to furnish not only sustenance, but were even regarded 
as a palatable meal. 


When the question of food was a settled matter, the next con- 
cerns were clothing and shelter, and in both these aspects the beaver 
has been an important factor. Frequent reference is found to the 
leather made from the skin of the beaver, which is described as 
being very tough and strong, and eminently suitable for the making 
of moccasins and mittens, though it was of course applied, generally, 
to such purposes as the making of the ‘‘mattas’’ or leather stock- 
ing, waist belts and fire-bags, shoulder belts and quivers ; while the 
toughness of the leather made it very useful when cut into thongs. 
In places such as the country of the Hurons, where the beaver sup- 
plied all the wants of the tribe, it is but natural to suppose that its 
leather would be converted into the ‘‘ tepee’’ or tent covering, as in 
the Buffalo districts where the tents were invariably made of 
Buffalo leather. 


86 CASTOROLOGIA. 


All these purposes required the leather alone with the hair re- 
moved, but there were also ways of tanning the skin with the hair 
on, the result being an article which for general utility has not been 
surpassed in all time. The quantities of ‘‘ Coat-Beaver’’ and of 
‘‘Mitten-Beaver,’’ gathered and exported to Europe, show how much 
the article was used in this way by the Indians until the introduction 
of the blanket from Europe, which has remained in fashion among 
them to this day, while it is doubtful if a beaver coat or ‘‘ foggey ’’ of 
the old style, has ever been seen by the present generation. It 
consisted of several skins, dressed softly, and then sewn together, 
making virtually a beaver blanket, and in many cases the leather 
side of this wrap was gorgeously decorated with designs painted or 
colored with native dyes, or in the case of the elders of the tribes, 
the decoration consisted of embroideries in porcupine quills or even 
wampum beads. 


The Indians made an ointment from the fat of the beaver which 
was supposed to have many curative and medicinal properties, not 
the least among which was its power to prevent frost bites, by being 
applied to the exposed parts of the body, which thus anointed would 
not be affected by the most extreme cold. This quality alone 
would have made the beaver of great economic value. 


Nothing, however, has made the animal so prominently import- 
ant as its castoreum, which, through the entire history of the Indians, 
has been highly valued, for in addition to its medicinal value it was 
also frequently used as a luxury. It is an historical fact that the 
North American Indian was a great devotee of the pipe, and his 
mystic conception of its high office in social affairs, is clearly de- 
monstrated by the great importance attached to the ceremony of 
smoking at council meetings the stone pipe or calumet—the “ Pipe 
of Peace.’’ ‘Tobacco was not always to be obtained, and at times 
recourse was made to various other vegetable substitutes, thus the 
inner bark of trees was much used in the North West, and was 
called ‘‘killikinic,’? while each locality would furnish its variety 
sometimes changing with the seasons. In such cases castoreum 
was used to add flavor to the compound, and it was supposed that it 


CASTOROLOGIA. 87 


imparted a peculiarly soothing effect to the mixture ; be that as it 
may, it is easily conceivable that the palate could become much at- 
tached to the pungent flavor which castoreum affords. 


Of all the uses of the beaver to the Indian, none was more indis- 
pensable before the advent of the white man, yet none was more 
immediately or more completely supplanted, than the beaver-tooth 
chisel. ‘The tooth was well adapted for the uses to which the Indian 
applied it, and he could easily keep up the supply. The North 
American Indian never used iron, nor did he even possess the pol- 


BEAVER-TOOTH CHISEL. 


FROM A SPECIMEN IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 


ished flint implements which distinguish the Neolithic races. Copper, 
obtained superficially from the rich deposits on the shores of Lake 
Superior, was used in a very limited way, mostly as decorations, 
and the Indian seems to have contented himself with wood, horn, 
bone and chipped flint ; all of which, with the exception of the flint, 
yielded freely to his very hard and sharp beaver-tooth chisel. The 
early accounts of the trade, preserve to us the list of articles which 
were offered to the Indian in exchange for his peltries, and the 
merest glance at them suffices to show how rich the Indian must have 
become in his possession of knives, hatchets, awls, and in fact every- 
thing that his primitive life required. "Though his native ingenuity 
was such as to produce the birch-bark canoe, the snowshoe, mocca- 
sin and other adaptations, with the help of bone implements alone, 
yet we can imagine he was not slow to replace his crude tools for 
the highly finished outfit so readily obtainable, and the beaver 
chisel may be held as the most interesting example of the past econ- 
omy of the beaver. 


88 CASTOROLOGIA. 


Incidental to the uses of the beaver we must not overlook its ser- 
vices in preserving a water supply. Water is as indispensableto the 
beaver as it is to man, yet the former was better adapted to preserve 
it, than the early settler. ‘The dams were often a mile in length and 
constructed to form reservoirs comparable only to great lakes, and it 
was impossible to break away these dams without materially alter- 
ing the local aspect. Droughts and parched lands soon followed in 
districts where once were beautiful lakelets and abundance of veget- 
ation. Onthe banks of the Rocky Mountains where now our settle- 
ments are quickly being planted, it is reported that the beaver has 
been protected expressly to preserve the water supply. 


Where beaver colonies had lived for many years undisturbed, 
the shallow waters above the dam became gradually overgrown with 
vegetation, and this with the accumulation of chips, branches, leaves 
and other vegetable refuse, has given us many a rich acre. Itis an 
interesting fact of local history, that the name of the Indian village 
which occupied the present site of the city of Montreal, is equivalent 
to the English ‘‘ Beaver Meadow,”’ while, both in the eastern and 
western suburbs of Montreal, the evidences of beaver meadows are 
unmistakable, and where now is the busy thoroughfare known as 
Craig street, once was the beaver canal. 


Indeed, it is not asserting too much for the past greatness of the 
beaver trade, to say, that where the early traders halted and built 
their trading posts or forts, there civilization has progressed, and 
thus unconsciously, the foundations of our magnificent cities were 
laid, while some can claim a gradual development, direct from the 
early beaver colony. 


CHEMICO-MEDICAL PROPERTIES. 


“You may take sarza to open the liver; 
steel to open the spleen ; flowers of sulphur for 
the lungs ; castoreum for the brain ; but no re- 
ceipt openeth the heart but a true friend, to 
whom you may impart griefs, joys, fears, hopes, 
suspicions, counsels and whatsoever lieth upon 
the heart to oppress it, in a kind of civil shrift 
or confession.’’ 


—BPacon. 


CHAPTER J. 


CASTOREUM ALONE VALUED FORMERLY—A PANACEA IN EARLY MEDICINE— 
COMPOSITION OF EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN VARIETIES — EARLY 
TREATISE ON THE MEDICINAL IMPORTANCE OF THE BEAVER—THE 
SECRET OF SOLOMON’S WISDOM. 


The earliest references we have to the beaver in history date 
back to 500 B.C., when Hippocrates mentioned it in connection 
with the medical uses of castoreum, and from the fact that Pliny 
wrote that the creature’s life was spared on the surrender of the 
valuable pouches of castoreum, we gather that it was for these alone 
that the animal was hunted. We know for certain that a thousand 
years elapsed before the felting property of the fur was discovered. 


In 1685, a treatise on the medico-chemical uses of the beaver ap- 
peared, and from it we learn that all the various parts of the animal 
were accepted specifics for most of human ills, and with the great 
value attached to its curative powers, we can understand how keenly 
it must have been hunted. When some of the supposed medicinal 
powers are reviewed, it will seem ridiculous that such ideas could 
ever have been seriously entertained, but the belief in the miracu- 
lous properties of the castoreum is still shared by so many, that the 
crude article is even now regularly sold in our drug stores, and its 
value steadily increases, so that quotations of from $8.00 to $10.00 
per pound are current for rough Canadian ‘‘Castors,’’ as the pouches 
are sometimes called, while the Russian article is even more valu- 
able. About six pairs of pouches weigh a pound, and in size and 
appearance they are well described as resembling dried and withered 
pears. The following analysis taken from Watt’s ‘‘ Dictionary of 
Chemistry ’’ shows how greatly the two differ : 


g2 CASTOROLOGIA. 


ANALYSIS. 
Russian Canadian 
Castoreum. Castoreum. 
Wolatileol) {oe a ia sa ee en pe OO 2.00 
@astoreuim resing 3) es ene SELES 58.60 
Cholesterin 1.20 
G@astorin® > .0.dex: Ste ae OSS 250 
Albumin ... Ades, a EE CORRE ee eaROLOS 1.60 
Glutinous pabeeanee fae ae fe) A sary 22330 2.00 
Extract sol. in water and nieshols Fe en OS2O 2.40 
Carbonate of ammonium. ......... 0.82 0.80 
Phosphatelofcalciumiy eae ee eA 1.40 
Carbonate ofcalcium ..... ne 38 33500 2.60 
Sulphates of potassium, calcium, magnes:. . 0.20 — 
Gelatinous subst. extracted by potash. . . . 2.30 8.40 
Gelatinous subst. extracted by potash \ yee AiG 
soluble in alcohol . Sts ere s ; 

MembranesskinsaccCgs gee een ae 2OLO8 3.30 
Water and loss . Fe Te ok Ree OS 11.70 

98.95 100.10 


Other special analytical tests have found traces of many other 
substances, but not, however, in any appreciable quantity. 


In the treatise above referred to, it is stated that the animal was 
hunted for ‘‘its skin, its fat, its blood, its hair, its teeth, and especi- 
ally for its pockets or tumours which are placed in the groins, and 
experience has shown that there is no part without its uses in medi- 
cine.’”’? Then follow in order the various remedies attributed to each 
part, and though the whole volume is of intense interest, only a 
summary of its contents can be given here. 


‘“’The skin of the beaver is of great utility in colic, in madness, 
and in spasms ; it cures bed sores ; and consumption in children. 


‘The fat of the beaver is of no less utility in medicine, and it is 
efficacious in all maladies which affect the nerves. It is useful 
in epilepsy, and prevents apoplexy and lethargy ; stops spasms and 


pee 
CASTOROLOGIA 


explicans 


Caftoris animalis naturam & ufum 
medico-chemicum 


Antidhac 


& 
JOANNE MARIO 
Bollenfi & Phyfico Ulmano poftea Augu- 
ftano celeberrimo labori infolito ; 

fubjecta, 


jam wero 


Ejusdem Auétoris & aliorum Medicorum ob. 
fervationibus luculentis ineditis , adfectibus 
omiflis, & propria experientia ‘parili 
labore aucta 


JOANNE FRANCO. 


S. Chryfoft. ineMatth. 

Invidia femper fibi eft inimica; naxz qui invidet, fibs 
ignominiam facit 3 illi antem cui invider , glee 
VidiB parst. 

ie oe EE STR A RCTS, AMG TO SERIO, 

-AuGusT# VINDEL, M DC LXxx¥. 

| Typis Koppmayerianis, 
Impenjis Vidua Theophili G ebslii, 


(PHOTO.-COPY OF TITLE PAGE OF THE ORIGINAL CASTOROLOGIA.) 


CASTOROLOGIA. 95 


convulsions, and is of great help in giddiness, toothache, asthma, 
dysentery and strains. 


‘The blood of the beaver is an efficacious remedy for epilepsy, 
for on giving it to a beggar boy who was subject to this malady, he 
was free from it for six days. I made him take some of it a second 
time, and I have never seen him since, which has made me believe 
that he was perfectly cured. 


‘“The hair of the beaver is employed to stop hemorrhages of 
some kinds, as I have lately proved after a surgeon had uselessly 
employed styptics. 


‘The teeth of the beaver are attached to the necks of children to 
facilitate the cutting of their teeth. They are also reduced to powder 
and given with much success in cases of pleurisy, and they preserve 
children from epilepsy if taken in some soup. 


‘“Castoreum is a proved remedy for earache, and is not less effi- 
cacious in deafness. It disperses abscesses when applied externally, 
and is the most powerful remedy that we have for the pains of gout. 


‘‘Castoreum is a very useful remedy in headaches; and is not 
less efficacious in epilepsy, provided that it be employed immediately. 
Those who are subject to colic or pains, receive solace from it, and it 
is a useful remedy for toothache. I have very often employed cas- 
toreum with success in headache, and I have been surprised at the 
promptitude with which it relieved it. Castoreum also alleviates 
tumours of the liver, being applied externally, as I have the oppor- 
tunity of proving for myself every day. 


‘“The wife of a ‘mender of old clothes’ was so much inconveni- 
enced by sciatica, that she could get no rest; I had, however, the 
happines of curing her with castoreum. 


‘Nothing is truer than that it is very difficult to arouse a leth- 
argic person from his stupor; I can, however, boast of having hap- 


96 CASTOROLOGIA. 


pily cured this malady with castoreum. Nobody is ignorant of the 
numerous maladies the spleen can cause in the human body by its 
swelling and painfulness, which I have often dispersed with the 
same remedy. 


‘‘A girl whose memory was completely lost through a malignant 
fever, recovered it again with the help of castoreum, to the great as- 
tonishment of her parents, who thanked me a thousand times. 


LOWER INCISOR TOOTH OF THE BEAVER. 


‘“Castoreum does much good to mad people ; and those who are 
attacked with pleurisy give proof of its effect every day, however 
little may be given to them. Castoreum destroys fleas; is an ex- 
cellent stomachic ; stops hiccough : induces sleep ; prevents sleepi- 
ness ; strengthens the sight, and taken up the nose it causes sneez- 
ing and clears the brain. 


‘‘Although authors who have written of venemous animals, put 
castoreum under the head of poisons, it is used as an antidote to the 
sting of scorpions, spiders and the Tarantula, the bad effects of op- 
ium and even against the pestilence. 


‘As all these remedies have a limited virtue, and can even some- 
times become injurious, one ought not to be surprised if castoreum 
does not always produce the anticipated result. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 97 


‘“’Phese are now the uses of castoreum in J/edicine, and I have 
myself witnessed most of the effects of which I have spoken, thus I 
give it no more praise than it merits. The doctors of Ausbourg have 
introduced it into thirty of the best compositions of the Pharma- 
copoeia. 


‘‘A Jew of my acquaintance who visited me occasionally, know- 
ing that I studied this work, communicated to me a secret which he 
had learnt from his ancestors, who, themselves got it from Solomon 
who had proved it. He assured me that in order to acquire a pro- 
digious memory and never to forget what one had once read, it was 
only necessary to wear a hat of the beaver’s skin, to rub the head 
and spine every month with that animal’s oil, and to take twice a 
year, the weight of a gold crown-piece of castoreum. 


‘As this has much affinity with my subject, I did not wish to 
omit it, though I allow everyone the liberty of believing what he 
will concerning it. 


‘“Tf the reader find some fault in my work, let him remember 
that I am but a man, and my knowledge is imperfect ; and if he dis- 
covers in it anything useful, let him return thanks to Him from 
whom all our knowledge comes.”’ 


) i WS 


SS 


y > 


MINS oS 
Ys SQvy> 
HIOWN 


DRIED CASTOREUM POUCHES, 


POPULARLY CALLED 


“cc 


““ BARK STONE” OR “‘ BEAVER CASTORS.” 


IMPORTANCE IN TRADE AND COMMERCE. 


“Tn 1693 the collection of Beaver at Fort 
Michilimacinac was safely brought to Montreal 
under heavy convoy and thus saved the country 
from utter poverty 


“In the eighteenth century Canada exported 
a moderate quantity of timber, wheat, the herb 
called ginseng, and a few other commodities ; 
but from first to last she lived chiefly on beaver 
skins.”’ 


—Kingsforda’s History of Canada. 


CHAPTER X: 


EARLY HISTORY OF THE FUR TRADE—THE FRENCH REGIME IN AMERICA, 
1603-1670—NEW NETHERLANDS—FORMATION OF THE HUDSON’S BAY 
CoMPANY — FRANCO-BRITISH STRUGGLE, 1670-1760 — BEAVERS THE 
MEDIUM OF EXCHANGE—BEAVER TALLIES AND BEAVER TOKENS— 
ANARCHIC PERIOD, 1760-1784—ORGANIZATION OF THE NORTH-WEST 
COMPANY — ANGLO-CANADIAN RIVALRY, 1784-1821 —AMERICAN FUR 
TRADING COMPANIES—THE REIGN OF THE GREAT MONOPOLISTS, I82I- 
1869—THE USEFULNESS OF THE BEAVER COMPLETELY SUPPLANTED. 


Though primitive man the world over clothed himself in furs, 
and retained his preference for this covering until he was semi-civil- 
ized, it was only at a very late date that his admiration of the rich 
colors and soft textures of furs returned. 


Fur trading as an established industry dates from the fourteenth 
century, when Italy led the world in her mercantile resources and at 
that period commanded a boundless traffic. 


Attempts were made to establish a traffic in furs with America in 
1549, but it was not until 1603, that a regular system of trade under 
Royal Charter began ; and until 1626, the development of the trade 
was much retarded by the entire privileges being controlled by an 
exclusive company, headed by M. de Chanion, whose sole object 
was personal gain. Northern Asia was at that time the chief supply 
market of Europe. . 


In 1623, the Dutch settlements in America (New Netherlands) 
had so far appreciated the importance of the traffic, as to adopt the 


102 CASTOROLOGIA. 


beaver in their first public seal, and it was present continually 
through all the political alternations to the reign of George II. 


In New France a change was made in 1628, and a larger company 
was formed, entitled ‘‘ The Company of the One Hundred Partners,”’’ 
who with trifling changes directed this enormous interest until 1663. 
The first regular fur trading establishment was set up at Tadousac on 
the River Saguenay in 1603; the next at Stadacona (Quebec) 1604, 
then Three Rivers, and lastly Ville Marie (Montreal) in 1611. For 
many years Three Rivers was a much more important post than 
Montreal, but about 1640, the change set in, and from that date 
to the present, Montreal has unquestionably been recognized as the 
mercantile capital of the country, and thither for many years most 
of the inhabitants of the continent carried their furs. 


The mzsston and the deaver were too frequently associated by the 
early missionaries. ‘They made the fur trader and the proselytizer 
one. Denonville writes ‘‘I receive letters from the most distant 
quarters, . . . where they propose wonders to me by establishing 
posts for the J7zsszon and for the deavers which abound there.”’ 


On the second day of May 1669, His Majesty Charles II. granted 
Royal Charter to the Governor and Company of Hudson’s Bay ; 
whereby the company at their own cost and charges having under- 
taken the ‘‘ discovery of a passage into the South Sea,’’ were made 
masters of the ‘‘ Lands, Countries, and Territories ; Coasts and Con- 
fines of the Seas, Streights, Bays, Lakes, Rivers, Creeks and Sounds, 
together with the whole Trade and Commerce of these parts,”’ for 
which privileges the adventurers promised to give yearly ‘‘ Two 
Elks and T'wo Black Beavers, whensoever, and as often as We, Our 
Heirs, and Successors, shall happen to enter into the said Countries, 
Territories and Regions hereby granted.”’ 


Thus originated one of the grandest commercial enterprises 
America has ever known, and there are features in its history which 
have never been surpassed, at any time, in any country. They 
most faithfully attempted to perform their contract with the British 


CASTOROLOGIA. 103 


Throne—the discovery of the North West passage—as the fate of 
Sir John Franklin will ever attest ; and in addition reaped hand- 
some rewards, from the rich traffic in peltries. 


To gather some idea of the universal importance of the beaver in 
those days, the condition of affairs can be easily reviewed by refer- 
ence to some of the early documents, from which we find that not 
only was all merchandise valued in beaver skins, but that all other 
skins obtained in the country which were offered in barter, were also 
reduced to the value of beaver skins, so that beavers were the only 
medium of exchange. In 1774, Arthur Dobbs published ‘‘ An Ac- 
count of the Countries Adjoining to Hudson’s Bay, in the North- 
West Part of America,’’ the principal object of which was to sug- 
gest certain measures for a better control of the trade, ‘‘ whereby the 
French will be deprived in a great measure of their Traffick in Furs, 
and the communication between Canada and the Mississippi be cut 
off.’ The following notes are from this valuable source : 


‘“Beaver being the chief Commodity received in Trade, in these 
Parts, it is made the Standard to rate all the Furs and other Goods 


by. 


3 Martin Skins ....... .. .as1 Beaver 
2OUCTSas eee eee Sk Orrperhans:2 

§ Queeqnechatch 5. 2 3s es 2 

THOx 2). 0s. 2s... “* Tuniless ext, then? 
TECAtE ME, var eh Gx ty foe @ so SS 

1 Moose Be SAL feu S. - 
2 Wear Skins’. 2.4.25 -5... " 
TeV le See tee ee 
tT Pound! Castorum 2... ... . 
to Pound Feathers. ....... * 
8 Pair Moose Hoofs . beg 3 
4 Fathom Netting. .......% 
1 Black Bear ... en ee Sey 
1 Cub : 
1 Weejack 


a 
nn LS ee oe oS) 


104 CASTOROLOGIA. 


STANDARD of TRADE carried on by the Hudson’s Bay Com- 
pany at Albany Fort, Moose River, and the East Main, as it stood 
in the year 1733, Beaver Skins being the STANDARD. 


Beads le Milk ...... .. . ™% pound for 1 Beaver 
Dor .coloured! 20] en eee a os 
Kettles, Brass 
Lead, black 
Gun-Powder . 
Shot 

Giilezbe Gg o 6 6 
Tobacco, Brazil 
Ditto Leaf . 
Ditto Roll 
Thread 
Vermillion . 
Brandy 

Broad Cloth 
Blankets 

Bays 

Duffels 
Flannel . 
Gartering 

Awl Blades . 
Buttons 
Breeches 
Combs 

Egg Boxes . 
Feathers, ved 
Fish-Hooks . 
Fire Steels 
Files 

Flints 

Guns 

Pistols 
Gun-Worms . 
Gloves, Varn 
Gogles 
Handkerchiefs . 
Hats, laced 
Hatchets 
Hawk Bells 
Ice Chizils 
Knives 


a] 


i 


| 
ss 


Se 


ce oe 


¥% ounce 
gallon 
yard 


yard 


ce oe 
oe ee 


ce “ce 


Dozen 
Pair 


[Oe SO OO i °C Oo. a er | 


iS) 
fo) 


= 
el el ee ee eS eo el Oe On | 


al 


6 6 
I 


iN} 
fe) 


10, II, 12, Beavers 
4 Beavers 
“ee 4 ae 


ton 


Rn CON FH HN SH AR ee 
nA on | 


oe) 


CASTOROLOGIA. 105 


Booking-Glasses’ a0.) . 2 44. 2 for I Beaver 
Mocotagaus 2-24 24 <9. : 5 2 Siok I e 
DeSean 
INSROUES 3 8 Ges Bae = 124 Glov. { Sat a 
Net-Lines . 2 sr oe 
Powder Horns . 2 os a 
Plain Rings 6 Ee ak 
Stone ditto 3 eer so 
Runlets . 1% “ tor 14 Beaver 
Scrapers . 2 ie Beaver, 
Sword Blades 2 ‘SAT os 
Spoons 4 claw a 
Shirts . § White & it for 1 Beaver 
Lcheck’d j 

Shoes . I Pair SAT ss 
Stockings : I a ENT oe 
Sashes, Worsted ....... 2 [oT se 
Thimbles .......... 6 SST es 
Tobacco Boxes . 2 a: “s 
Tongs . 2 Pair > 
Trunks I se) ee 
Twine . I Skane eS iT “ 


Nore.—That the standard at York Fort and Churchill is much 
higher, the French being not so near these places, and therefore 
can’t interfere with the Company’s Trade so much as they do at 
Albany and Moose River, where they undersell the Company, and by 
that means carry off the most valuable furs.”’ 


The number of beavers gathered and exported annually by the 
Hudson's Bay Company at this time was estimated at about 15,000 
beaver coats and 175,000 skins, and with regard to the supply col- 
lected by the French, we quote M. d’ Auteuil, who valued ‘‘ the ex- 
port from Canada, in 1715, of over 100,000 skins, as amounting to 
two million francs,’’ the trade being then in the hands of the ‘‘ Com- 
pany of Canada.’ 


Farther south, complaints were made of the contest that existed 
between the governments of Canada and of the Province of New 
York ‘‘ about the Beaver trade,’’ notwithstanding which, the collec- 
tion exported from New York amounted, at a minimum, to 80,000 


106 CASTOROLOGIA. 


skins annually. Governor Thomas Dongan having an eye to the 
income derived from this source, suggested that ‘‘It will be very 
necessary for us to encourage our young men to goe a beaver-hunt- 
ing as the French doe,’’ and in the same report he fixes ‘‘ the custom 
or duty upon every beaver skin commonly called a whole Beaver, 
ninepence.’”’ 


‘““And that all other fur and peltry be valued accordingly, 
that is, for two half beavers, ninepence; for four lapps, nine- 
pence, &c., and all other peltry to be valued equivalent to the 
whole beaver exported out of the province, (bull or cow hides 
excepted). 


These rates were much lower than formerly when the ex- 
port duty had reached ‘‘one shilling and threepence on beaver 
skins and other peltries proportionally,’’ and it should be re- 
membered that money in those days was relatively 
of much greater value. 


Fabulous prices apparently paid for beaver were 
really bribes for Indian patronage, and gave rise to the 
Indian expression ‘‘ underground’’ or secret presents. 


The custom of valuing all skins in their equivalent 
to beavers, led to the habit of marking each package 
with its relative value, by attaching a small tally-stick 
such as shown in the accompanying engraving, and 
thus indicating, for the convenience of barter, which 
packages should be turned over to the trader in settle- 
ment of purchases; so effective has this system been, 
that in many places to-day in the interior or far distant 
trading posts, it is still followed. 


At some points the entire collection of furs is at once 
assumed by the company, for which they give beaver 
tokens, and these in their turn are soon transferred to 


TALLY FOR 3 
rive Beavers. the company, for the various wants of the trapper. 


CASTOROLOGIA. IO7 


The exact details of this method of trading, form part of the re- 
cords of an enquiry instituted many years ago, to ascertain how the 
Hudson’s Bay Company could do justice to the Indian, and still pay 
dividends of over fifty per cent. per annum. It was explained that 
the Company put only a fair advance on the cost laid down in each 
‘Post,’’ ‘‘Fort’’ or ‘‘ Factory’ of all such goods as came under 
the heading of necessaries; but for luxuries they felt justified in 
charging all the Indian could afford to pay, so that they did him no 
injustice by taking a beaver skin, worth twelve shillings in ex- 
change for a colored cotton handkerchief, which originally only cost 
a couple of pennies. The records describe the mode of trading as 
follows : 


‘“An Indian arriving at one of the Company’s establishments 

with a bundle of furs, which he intends to trade, proceeds, in the 
first instance, to the trading room; there the trader separates the 
furs into lots, and, after adding up the amount, delivers to the In- 
dian a number of little pieces of wood indicating the number of 
made-beaver to which his hunt amounts. He is next taken to the 
store room, where he finds himself surrounded by bales of blankets, 
slop-coats, guns, knives, powder-horns, flints, axes, &c. Each ar- 
ticle has a recognized value in made-beaver. A slop-coat, for ex- 
ample, is twelve made-beavers, for which the Indian delivers up 
twelve of his pieces of wood ; for a gun he gives twenty ; for a knife, 
two; and so on, until his stock of wooden cash is expended.”’ 
‘* Made-beaver’’ and ‘‘ whole-beaver ’’ were local technical terms 
employed to denote the fixed unit of the locality, and were asso- 
ciated with beavers in the sense that a skin from an adult beaver, 
prime in quality and in perfect condition was the actual unit or 
‘“made-beaver,’? while in practice, beaver skins themselves were 
converted into ‘‘ made-beavers,’’ varying with the generosity of the 
buyer or the demands of the seller, so that in some cases two small 
beaver skins would equal only one ‘‘ made beaver.”’ 


In some instances a difficulty was experienced in arranging for 
the fractional parts of the ‘‘ made-beaver,’’ as the tally sticks or 


108 CASTOROLOGIA. 


tokens in existence did not provide for such sub-divisions of value, 
and in 1854, Mr. George Simpson McTavish, then in charge of 
Albany Fort, suggested the issue of metal tokens to meet the re- 
quirement. With the suggestion which was forwarded to London, 
Mr. McTavish sent sketches of the proposed tokens, bearing on the 
obverse, the coat of arms of the Company,—a shield quartered, with 
a beaver in each quarter, a fox for the crest and two stags as sup- 
porters ; underneath, the motto *‘ Pro pelle cutem ;’’ the whole sur- 
rounded by a wreath of oak leaves; and on the reverse the mono- 
gram H.B.; the initials E. M., for the district ‘‘ East Main,’’ for 
which they were specially required ; then the fractional divisions 


THE HUDSON’S BAY COMPANY’S BEAVER TOKEN. 


%, 4, ™%, and also 1, for the full unit; below which, in the orig- 
inal design appeared the letters M. B., in monogram as it was cus- 
tomary to write them, thus MB, signifying ‘‘ made-beaver’’ The de- 
sign was approved of, the dies ordered, and in due course the tokens 
were forwarded for distribution among the posts in the East Main 
district, when with disappointment it was found that the monogram 
M.B., had been misinterpreted by the die-cutters as the separate 
letters N.B., incorrectly drawn. ‘This curious error has led to the 
belief that the ‘‘made beaver’’ was sometimes called a ‘‘natural 
beaver,’’ but this was not the case. 


The extreme value attached by numismatists to the beaver tokens 
of the North West Company, prepared the way for the following ex- 
traordinary piece of fraud. Some years after the circulation of the 


CASTOROLOGIA. 109 


Hudson’s Bay tokens, a specimen reached Quebec in the possession of 
the captain of a trading schooner from Labrador. As usual, the cargo 
contained many valuable furs, and in bargaining for these, the token 
passed over to a young fur merchant of Quebec. No special value 
being attached to it in his hands, it was not a difficult matter for a 
persevering acquaintance to beg it, and become its owner, which, 
however, was only accomplished by misrepresentations ; then in 
Montreal it was exhibited, with a wonderful story as to its antiquity 
and rarity, and finally it was sold to a member of the Numismatic 
Society for $110.00, being the first specimen ever seen and supposed 
to be unique and to date back earlier than the North West tokens. 
Whole sets of the Hudson’s Bay tokens are not uncommonly met 
with now, but they are always valued as among scarce examples. 


In 1664, the English had dis-possessed the Dutch of their Ameri- 
can provinces, and thus encroached on both sides of Canada, or New 
France, allying with the Indians, and interfering materially with 
the plans of the French monopolists. Much exclusiveness on the 
part of those autocrats had driven many of the traders to settle 
among the English, where trade was more free, and the profits 
greater. The French government took cognizance of the superiority 
New York was acquiring, and changed the manner of carrying on 
the fur trade. Decrees emanated from the French Court, which di- 
rected the grading and fixed the prices to be paid for the several 
assortments of beaver; and the Court also undertook the manage- 
ment of the trading posts at Frontenac (Kingston), Niagara and 
Toronto. Asa result, all refuse, unsaleable furs and skins taken in 
summer, became the property of the King, and these furs, &c., 
‘bought without examination, were carelessly deposited in ware- 
houses, and eaten up by the moths.’’ The fur trade of Canada con, 
tinued for some time in this way; brandy was working havoc 
among the Indians, and the preparations were perfect for the petty 
warfare soon instigated by the jealousy between the English and 
French traders, ‘The French had already crossed by way of Lake 
St. John, and attacked the Hudson’s Bay Company’s forts, and the 
English had attempted the capture of Quebec; when in 1688, the 
Revolution in England tempted Frontenac, Governor of Canada, to 


I1o CASTOROLOGIA. 


undertake the entire overthrow of the English in Hudson’s Bay, and 
for years the warfare was maintained, till in 1696, the English Gov- 
ernment gave assistance to the Hudson’s Bay Company and the 
struggle became of national interest. 


The treaty of Utrecht brought about peace in America, as it did 
in Europe, and the fur trade began to increase rapidly and to 
return enormous profits. "The annual returns from Prince of Wales 
Fort alone reached 20,000 beaver skins, and though at that time 
the exports included a long list of valuable articles, the quantity 
of beaver skins represented two-thirds of the entire value. A most 
extraordinary crisis was reached in the year 1700; for some time 
prior to this, the collection of beavers had been so excessive as to 
partly glut the market, but in the year mentioned, the number of 
beaver skins collected at Montreal was so enormous, that three- 
fourths of the collection were burned, to make the other portion 
worth exporting. 


The methods of handling, and the kinds and names of beaver 
skins in those days, were totally different to anything met with to- 
day. Happily these details were all preserved, and a description 
can be given, not only of each kind, but also of the prices current 
one hundred and fifty years ago. 


‘‘ There are eight kinds of beavers received at the Farmer’s Office. 


‘‘’The first is the fat Winter Beaver, killed in Winter, which 
is worth 5s. 6d. per pound. 


“The second is the fat Summer Beaver, killed in Summer, and is 
worth 2s. 9d. 


‘The third, the dry Winter Beaver, and fourth, the Bordeau, is 
much the same, and are worth 3s. 6d. 


‘‘ The fifth, the dry Summer Beaver, is worth very little, about 
Is. gd. per pound. 


CASTOROLOGIA. III 


‘““'The sixth is the Coat Beaver, which is worn till it is half 
greased, and is worth 4s. 6d. per pound. 


‘<The seventh, the Muscovite dry Beaver, of a fine skin, covered 
over with a silky hair; they wear it in Russia, and comb away all 
the short down, which they make into stuffs and other works, leav- 
ing nothing but the silky hair; this is worth qs. 6d. per pound. 


‘The eighth is the Mittain Beaver, cut out for that purpose to 
make Mittains, to preserve them from the cold, and are greased by 
being used, and are worth Is. 9d. per pound.”’ 


The sale of beaver skins by the pound was a very early custom 
which has survived until now, and arose thus. Beavers were for- 
merly used exclusively for hatters’ purposes, and in a ‘‘ Report 
upon the Petition Relating to the Manufacture of Hats,’’ presented 
to the British government in 1752, indirectly we gather some most 
valuable hints concerning the traffic in beaver skins. The hatter, of 
course, used only the beaver wool or fur which had been removed 
from the skin and separated from the long, coarse, outer hairs—the 
‘‘King’’ hairs—and was worth in this state from twenty to forty, 
and sometimes, even fifty shillings per pound. But the steadily ad- 
vancing price of beaver seems to have reduced the profits of the first 
dealers to such a degree that recourse was had to the fatal plan of 
adulterating the wool, with materials sufficiently like it to make a 
passable mixture, but not without its effects on the quality. To 
overcome the possibility of this fraud the raw skins were purchased 
directly by the hatters, who estimating the quantity of wool rela- 
tively by the weight of the entire pelt, naturally established this 
method of dealing. Further there was an evident difficulty in de- 
terming a basis of value for the ‘‘Coat Beaver’’ and ‘‘ Mittain 
Beaver’’ on any other plan. The average weight of beaver skins is 
from a pound and a half to a pound and three quarters each. 


A change suddenly took place in 1760, when Canada was handed 
over to British rule and the entire continent recognized the sov- 
ereignty of the British Throne. A greedy rush, to gather the crop 


I1I2 CASTOROLOGIA. 


of peltries which the Indians had hitherto passed through the 
French hands immediately followed. Among the first to reach the 
west by the newly opened route was Alexander Henry, an account 
of whose adventures, which extended over sixteen years, forms a 
unique volume in our bibliography. His graphic description of the 
intertribal game of ‘‘ Bagawatin’’—le jeu de la crosse—followed by 
the massacre of the English inhabitants of Fort Michilimakinac, 
gives this book extreme value. During this time the great wars 
of the Revolution were taking place, whereby Britain lost, in 1776, 
more than she had added so short a time before. ‘The whole of this 
conflict had its influence over the Indians, who became the allies 


THE NORTH WEST COMPANY’S BEAVER TOKEN. 


pro tem of the highest bidder, and the more domestic avocation of 
fur-hunting was neglected for many years. It was not till 1784 
that any organized attempt was again made to control the fur trade 
of Canada, when the formation of ‘‘ The North West Company of 
Montreal,’? marked an epoch in Canadian history, of which we may 
be justly proud. With regard to the importance of the Beaver in 
their estimation, it would almost appear that they cared for little 
else. The Governor lived in ‘‘ Beaver Hall,’’ a name still perpetu- 
ated in Montreal ; the members, only sixteen originally, formed a 
social club as distinguished as it was exclusive and named the 
‘* Beaver Club ;’’ and finally the Company issued a ‘‘ Beaver Coin- 
age,’’ specimens of which realise fabulous prices to-day, as only 
about seven pieces are known to exist. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 113 


From small beginnings the organization developed rapidly till 
its army of employees rose to upwards of four thousand. ‘The men 
conspicuously associated with this Company stand in our country’s 
history as powerful, brave and energetic examples of Scotch Cana- 
dians, and we admire the names, Mackenzie, McGillivray, McTa- 
vish, the McGills, Frobishers, Simpsons, and others, though one 
important name has been curiously omitted from its share of glory, 
and that is the name of David Thompson, whose achievements 
have been of national importance, yet but little popular reputation 
has he gained. 


Thus the declining years of the last century saw the North West 
Company enjoying an amount of prosperity which elevated the 
shareholders to the dignity of merchant princes, and the importance 
of the trade eclipsed all other projects for many years. 


Early in the present century, a spirit of enterprise seemed to have 
awakened in the United States, and in 1804 Messrs. Lewis and 
Clarke, fitted out by the American Government, accomplished the 
task which Messrs. Carver and Whitworth had projected as early as 
17743; this being no less than a march across the continent, by way 
of the Missouri, and the water courses of the eastern slope of the 
Rocky Mountains, thence over the mountain peaks, by the hazard- 
ous and treacherous passes, all unknown to the explorers, till the 
fertile Pacific slopes were reached. 


John Jacob Astor was then a young man, full of pluck and enter- 
prise, and his attention being attracted to the new fields, he organized 
in 1810, the famous “‘ Pacific Fur Company.’’ He outfitted one contin- 
gent for crossing the continent, and another by ship to round Cape 
Horn, to carry supplies for the proposed settlement of Astoria and 
for the further purpose of pursuing trade with the natives along the 
coast. ‘The story of this enterprise as told by Washington Irving 
is among the classics of our literature, and a more enchanting his- 
torical romance America has never produced. 


Now we have the three avenues more actively employed than 


114 CASTOROLOGIA. 


ever before, every corner of the continent being ransacked for 
beavers ; the Hudson’s Bay Company on the north, the Pacific Fur 
Company on the south, and the North West Company by way of 
the St. Lawrence, or the central route. Of course the boundaries of 
these corporations were quite undefined, and in fact there seems to 
have been most honor in the breach of mutual respect, for the ac- 
counts of the attempted subterfuges to gain advantage, reflect dis- 
credit on corporations of such wealth and magnitude. So fiercely 
did competition run, that bloodshed at last followed and left a ruined 
trade, as the natural consequence of successive efforts to outdo pre- 
vious methods of sharp practice, wherefore, defeated by its own ob- 
jects, and to save further difficulties which threatened, an amalgam- 
ation of the two northerly bodies was effected in 1821, from which 
date a new era in the fur trade began. 


Just at this time, it will be remembered, the Nutria fur was in- 
troduced to relieve the excessive demand for beavers, and a few 
years later, when silk was adapted to hat making in imitation of the 
‘old beaver,’’ we may say the question of the beaver extermination 
was indefinitely postponed. Of course the hunt was not completely 
abandoned, only such quarters were neglected as required too great 
an outlay of energy for the few beaver skins obtainable, and in a few 
years in some of these districts the animals became very plentiful 
again. 


The absorption of the North West Company also lengthened the 
history of the Hudson's Bay Company, as far as regards its fur in- 
dustries, and the extraordinary magnitude of their operation has 
certainly been without parallel in our day. For nearly fifty years 
the gathering of the annual fur crop, and its subsequent disposal at 
auction, in London, has been a regular chapter in the growing his- 
tory of the Empire. But in 1869,the Dominion of Canada was com- 
pelled to take over the reins of power from the Hudson’s Bay Com- 
pany, giving a monetary consideration and recognizing certain 
very considerable land possessions, which latterly have become of 
the first importance to the Company, and placed the beaver trade 
forever among the past glories of our history. 


A TRAPPER AND TRADER OF THE OLD REGIME. 


CASTOROLOGIA. Tr, 


From an indispensable source of food and clothing, we have seen 
the beaver advance in importance till nations waged wars for the 
monopoly of its rich traffic, and now it has become so insignificant a 
factor in trade that there is scarcely a single field left, in which it 
does not find a successful competitor. Its value as food is never 
considered, now that the means of carriage have so annihilated dis- 
stance, that the luxuries of the most favored nations are obtainable 
in cities which have sprung up in wilderness and prairie, while from 
these centres radiate every modern means of conveyance. Where 
a dozen years ago the rickety, creaking Saskatchewan cart followed 
wearily the slow footed ox, to-day the trains rush with mimic flashes 
of the lightning which urges their career. Beaver Jeather, like 
beaver wool, has lost its recognition among the requirements of pro- 
gressive manufactures, and, as the beaversdisappeared before ap- 
proaching civilization, their places have been more than supplanted 
by the domestic cow and the sheep, which furnish so completely our 
wants of food and clothing. 


One other aspect alone remains to consider, that of the uses 
of the beaver skin to the furrier. This field was opened about 
the beginning of the century, when nutria and silk filled the 
demand, which for generations had relied almost solely on the 
beaver, and had threatened the extermination of this valuable 
animal. In texture the fur of the beaver is very appropriate for all 
smaller articles of apparel such as caps, collars, victorines, cuffs, 
muffs and gauntlets, and fashion has even gone the length of mak- 
ing it into entire garments for both ladies’and gentlemen’s wear, but 
for these latter the weight may be considered an objectionable fea- 
ture. For all these purposes the leather is dressed or tanned—a 
simple process for reducing the weight of the skin and extracting 
the fat and grease—and then the long coarse hairs are usually 
plucked out by hand, or sweated and pulled by a heavy knife on a 
beam. When dressed only, the skin is said to be ‘‘natural,’’ it is 
usually of a brownish color, and the appearance is rather rough and 
meets with limited favor; but when the coarse top hairs have been 
removed it is known as ‘‘ plucked beaver,’’ and in this state is very 
familiar in the trade. The appearance is generally a soft woolly fur 


I18 CASTOROLOGIA. 


from half an inch to nearly an inch in depth, and bluish or silvery 
grey in color. ‘There is no special utility in the fur, and it has 
many rivals which tend to make it less esteemed than it otherwise 
would be; and to the unpractised eye there is a general resemblance 
to it in the plucked otter, plucked nutria, and plucked raccoon. 


In the report of the Hudson’s Bay Company for this year, pub- 
lished in London, July 14th, announcement is made that ‘‘ owing to 
the state of trade the Directors had closed a number of their posts.”’ 
The beaver hunter finds his occupation usurped by every villager who 
can procure a trap or gun, and who sallies into the woods intent on 
the destruction of whatever comes in his way. The ‘‘ voyageur’’ 
has long lost his usefulness now that steamboats throng our waters, 
and the old institutions of the once famous beaver trade are one by 
one passing into the mists of oblivion, so that to Mrs. Hopkin’s 
beautiful portrayal of the ‘‘ Brigade of voyageurs crossing Lake 
Superior’? we may appropriately apply the alternative title, and 
fancy that we witness the actual passing of the old régime into ‘‘ the 
Spiritland.”’ 


LAKE SUPERIOR, OR THE SPIRIT LAND. 


USES OF THE BEAVER IN MANUFACTURES. 


“‘ Aristotle said in his chapter on hats, that 
the history of this indispensable finish to dress 
would never be complete. Undoubtedly, some 
serious writers, learned men of the first order, 
have not hesitated in our day, in instituting an 
inquiry into the principal historic periods of 
fashion, to spend some time over the Petasus, 
that head covering as indispensable to the 
health of man as to the dignity of his bearing. 
But these are far from summary indications of 
a work in accord with the importance of the 
subject. Let us hope that the prophecy of the 
ancient philosopher will not be verified, and 
that one day all the documents on this subject 
will be collected with care. That which in our 
eyes is only a fragment, drawn by chance from 
an interesting commercial case, will become a 
paragraph of an honorable quarto.” 


A Paragraph in the History of Beaver Hais—1634. 


—Anonymous. 


CHAPTER or. 


THE NATURE OF FELT—PROPERTIES WHICH MADE THE BEAVER VALUABLE 
— THE WONDERFUL ESTEEM OF OLD ‘“ BEAVERS’’ — LEGISLATION 
CONCERNING BEAVER HATS—PROCESSES OF MANUFACTURE—BEAVER 
WoolL ADULTERATED AND FINALLY SUPPLANTED. 


The history of hats in different ages and different climes, would 
convey a great fund of information, and would doubtless mark the 
stages of civilization more clearly than the study of any other fea- 
ture of our dress. At what time felted wool was first employed in 
making hats, it would be difficult to say, though it is known to have 
been used in Western Europe since the fourteenth century, when 
felted hats were articles of luxury, and worn only by the rich. 
How felting was discovered may ever remain a secret, as history af- 
fords us only the traditions concerning St. Clement, which, though 
of much simple beauty, would scarcely satisfy a scientific enquiry. 
The story tells how St. Clement, a devout and generous priest, be- 
coming weary and footsore while intent on one of his charity mis- 
sions, found his sandaled feet so galled, that to proceed on his jour- 
ney seemed impossible. He sought rest by the roadside, but his 
attention was distracted by the bleating of lambs, while beyond the 
hedge he beheld a fox chasing a lamb. _ With characteristic pity, 
obeying the impulse of his good heart, he cleared the hedge, fright- 
ened away the fox and saved the lamb, wherefore the grateful little 
creature crouched lovingly at his feet, and expressed its gratitude in 
eloquent glances. While fondling the lamb, St. Clement observed 
some loose wool which he gathered and examined. ‘The texture 
was so lovely, that an inspiration suggested applying it to his lacer- 
ated feet. He bound his wounds with the soft wool, and was able 
to resume his pilgrimage. Reaching his destination, he removed 
the sandals, and instead of the fine soft wool, he discovered a piece 
of felted cloth. 


122 CASTOROLOGIA. 


This interesting story accounts for the first principles of felting, 
and moreover, St. Clement has become the patron saint of the 
‘* Hatters’ Guild.’’ In Ireland and Roman Catholic countries the 
festival of St. Clement is celebrated each year on the twenty-third 
day of November. 


No further knowledge of felting was obtained till the microscope 
was introduced into manufactures, and the structure of fibres and 
tissues, both animal and vegetable became clearly understood. 
Place a single particle of beaver fur under the microscope, and with 
a power giving magnification of about fifty diameters, the struct- 
ure at once is discernible. Over the entire 
surface a series of scales appear to overlap 
each other, and the edges of these lying all 
one way, give the fibre the impulse to travel 
in the opposite direction, for the ‘‘ staple ’’— 
as the edges are called—catches when pressed 
against, and forces the fibre onward, the dis- 
engaged edges lying flat the while; yet so 
firmly do they interlock, that the fibre will 
be invariably broken in the attempt to with- 
draw it. A quantity of fur or wool having 
this ‘‘staple’’ is pressed and worked together, especially with the 
assistance of steam or hot water, and the result is a piece of felted 
cloth, ready to be stretched into the shape of a hat or a boot, and 
dyed black, or colored to fancy. What is generally called fur is the 
woolly undercoat, the warm, soft covering supposed to be universally 
present on animals, and this wool is more or less stapled. The 
beautiful fur of the beaver is most perfectly constructed for felting 
purposes, and very early was this property discovered, in fact, so 
universally was beaver-wool esteemed, that two hundred and fifty 
years ago, when the introduction of rabbit’s fur and other adulter- 
ations affected the beaver trade, Parliament stepped in to prevent 
the abuse, and tried to maintain the purity of the beaver felt. 


BEAVER FUR 
MAGNIFIED 50 DIAMETERS, 


The interesting document, from which the introductory sentence 
is selected, gives some idea of the former importance of the beaver 


CASTOROLOGIA. 123 


to the hatting trade. It is a decree of the Court of France for the re- 
duction in price of beaver hats, in which prayer is made ‘‘that the ap- 
plicant (Liberti) may be permitted to give information of the treaties 
and conventions secretly acquired by monopoly between the master 
hatters who work in beaver, and Mathier d’ Ustrelo, a foreigner ; the 
said d’Ustrelo not to sell beaver skins, except to them, and in re- 
ciprocation they have promised the said d’Ustrelo, not to buy beaver 
skins except from him. And to give information likewise of frauds 


4, 
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(SSS 


Si. CLEMENT, 


PATRON SAINT OF THE HATTERS. 


124 CASTOROLOGIA. 


perpetrated in the manufacture of the said hats, putting first a 
layer of beaver, which makes the inside of the hat, then a second, 
which is only English rabbit's hair, and above that a third, which is 
beaver. And again, in order that all may conform to a general rule, 
that the master hatters will be forced to make a declaration if they 
wish to work in beaver, or in wool and rabbit’s hair, and forbidden 
to work against the terms of their agreement, and that it will be en- 
joined on the master hatters who have made the choice of working 
in beaver, to put on each hat their particular mark before they are 
put in the dye, according to the statutes and decrees under penalty 
of confiscation and fine. And further, that it may be permitted to 
the said Liberti to continue in the Hépital de la Trinité, or such 
other place as it may please the Court to designate, the manufac- 
ture of beaver hats by all the masters and journeymen, who choose 
to work there, and will be qualified for the offers which the said 
Liberti makes to furnish them with prepared beaver, and to pay 
them for the workmanship of each hat well and duly made (which 
is the work of half a day) the sum of forty cents (quarante sols), and 
to supply for the present, fine and well made hats, to the public for 
the sum of quarante-quatre livres (about $8.80), and in the month 
of January next, to give them for quarante livres (about $8.00), and 
according to the quantity which will be forthcoming in the follow- 
ing years, to moderate the price in proportion ; that the said Liberti 
may be permitted to seize and hold in the hatter’s shops, as well as 
in other places, beaver hats which they may find mixed, defective, 
falsified, and not marked with the customary marks of the masters 
who may have made them, and that the penalties and fines will be 
awarded, half as the profit of the plaintiff, and the other half as 
the profit of the poor children of the Trinité, the costs deducted, and 
in addition, to ordain such rule for the public as it may please the 
Court of the one part, and the sworn master hatters of the town of 
Paris, appellees and defendants, of the other.’ ”’ 


Four years later than this—in 1638—the British Parliament is- 
sued a proclamation, strictly forbidding the use of any material for the 
making of hats, excepting ‘‘ Beaver stuff’’ or ‘‘ Beaver wool,’’ and we 
learn that in 1663, a good beaver hat was worth £4 5s., which very 


“CONTINENTAL” “NAVY”? 
COCKED HAT. COCKED HAT. 
(1776) (1800) 


CLERICAL: 
(Kighteenth Century) 


(THE WELLINGTON.) (THE PARIS BEAU.) 
(1812) (1815) 


(THE D’ORSAY.) (THE REGENT.) 
(1820) (1825) 


MODIFICATIONS OF THE BEAVER HAT. 


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CASTOROLOGIA. 127 


positively indicates the high esteem in which they were then held. 
Beaver hats had been introduced into general wear in the reign of 
Queen Elizabeth, but in that period they assumed all manner of 
shapes and variety of color. Shortly afterwards brims were much 
broadened, and hung down when in wear. ‘These broad brims con- 
tinued to be worn, but the inconvenience of the wide flapping edge, 
led to the turning up of first one and then two flaps, until in the 
reign of Queen Anne, a third flap was turned up, and the regular 
‘cocked hat’’ or ‘‘ continental hat’’ was formed. In various styles 
the ‘‘cocked hat’’ remained fashionable during the whole of last cen- 
tury, and with the present century, came in the conventional ‘‘ stove 
pipe ’’ shape, which with infinite variety, has lasted to our own day. 
The shape of the hat was the fancy of a season, and even the most 
fractional variation in width of brim or height of crown, was suffi- 
cient to satisfy the demand for novelty. The general conception of 
a beaver hat is the well known model adopted for civil use, but the 
pliable beaver felt has been subject to almost every modification a 
head covering could possibly assume. In the accompanying plate 
we illustrate several well known shapes, all typical examples of the 
use of the pure felted beaver, yet exhibiting a wide field of con- 
sumption and perfect adaptability in each case. 


Though apparently different, these several types all conform to 
one general system of manipulation, and as the introduction of ma- 
chinery has brought about so many changes, as to place the manu- 
facture of the old felted beaver among the lost arts, it will be inter- 
esting to follow briefly, the processes through which each of them 
has passed, and perhaps learn more to admire the dignity once at- 
tached to a ‘‘ Beaver.’’? The nature of the pelt, as it came from the 
trader, in the raw state, has been already implied ; it was a rough, 
greasy skin, covered with coarse brownish hair, under which was 
the fine rich fur or wool. ‘The skin was first shaved clean of both 
hair and fur, and consigned at once to distinct industries, so that for 
the moment we leave it, and consider the several stages through 
which the other parts were passed. ‘To separate the coarse hair from 
the wool, was managed in a very simple and effectual manner ; this 
was done by means of the ‘‘ blowing machine,’’ into which the mixed 


128 CASTOROLOGIA. 


material was placed, and treated as follows:—A revolving fan, work- 
ing at great speed, drove a current of air through the receiving box 
and thence along an enclosed casing about a hundred feet in length. 
The force of the air carried the mixed material from the receiving 
box along the casing, but as the force of the draft diminished, the 
power of gravitation took the work upon itself of separating every 
fibre according to its weight, thus the heavy coarse hair and any 
foreign substance mixed with it, fell soonest, and was gathered into 


THE HOOD, 
OR BEAVER HAT IN ITS FIRST FORM, 


bins, while each succeeding grade of finer material was sorted and 
deposited each with its kind, and practically divided, so as to show 
every variety of quality contained in the original fleece. ‘The finest 
and most valuable fur was, owing to its lightness, blown to the ex- 
treme edge of the casing, and freed from every impurity. 


This simple contrivance achieved what apparently is beyond the 
appreciation of our most delicate mechanism, and this process 
practically determined the consequent quality of the finished article, 
as the next stages will show. ‘Taking the grade of wool required 
for the inside layer of the hat, to the ‘‘ hat forming’’ machine, and 


CASTOROLOGIA. 129 


laying on the feeding apron, the necessary quantity, this was gradu- 
ally supplied to rollers, revolving at, say four thousand per minute, 
and the fibres were thus separated and thrown towards the outlet of 
this machine, opposite to which was a slowly revolving copper-cone. 
This cone was about three feet high, and was finely perforated, while 
within it an exhaust fan caused a current of air to pass from the out- 
side through the perforations.’ By this means the fibres were drawn 
on to the cone and held in place till a delicate covering of fur over- 
lapped the whole form, when a fine spray of boiling water turned on 
to this fur and cone caused the fur to ‘‘set’’ or commence felting, 
holding together sufficiently to allow the delicate form to be handled 
and removed from the cone, furnishing the hood, or beaver hat, in 
its first form, and the remaining stages were merely to shape and to 
dress the surface. By repeated applications of warmth, moisture 
and pressure, the felting was continued till the texture became firm 
and tough, and was ready to draw over a block or mould, on which 
the material was worked until it had taken the desired shape. This 
process required considerable skill as the hat should be completely 
shaped before the hood lost the warmth and moisture necessary to 
keep it pliable ; it stiffened when cold as a nature of the felt, but to 
produce a harder body, shellac was forced into the hood from the 
inner side. ‘Then taking some of the finest fur and spreading it 
over the surface of the ‘‘body,’’ by the application of warm water 
and careful manipulation, the staple was worked in so as to give the 
effect of fur growing all over the roughly-formed hat, and in this 
shape it passed into the dye-room. 


It need scarcely be stated that the machinery introduced in this 
description was comparatively of recent date, and that every advance 
in mechanical appliance thrust into disuse the earlier manual tools. 
Thus the blowing machine supplanted the old ‘‘bow’’ ; and prior 
to the introduction of the hat-forming machine, the hatters’ leather 
and the palm of the hands accomplished in a tedious way similar 
results. ‘The process of felting by hand had the result of hardening 
the cuticle till the hatter’s hand was quite corneous. 


The dyeing is not peculiar to the texture, but is the same as ap- 


K 


130 CASTOROLOGIA. 


plied to any woollen fabric, and though we are familiar to-day with 
only the sombre black and an occasional variety of shade in the case 
of natural wool, in olden times a great deal of taste was displayed 
in the matter of color. 


To ‘‘dress’’ the hat it was placed on a revolving block, while 
the finisher applied brushes, irons, sandpaper and velvet polishers, 
till the surface was so smooth, that an old fashioned ‘‘ beaver ”’ 
would shine as brightly as a modern silk hat, while it had the ex- 
quisite beauty of the long velvety pile or fur. The trimming and 
binding were minor operations, though they helped to give the 
hat much of its style, and when the trimmer had done his work, the 
hat had received the finishing touch. 


Simple as these various processes may seem, the making of a 
beaver hat was almosta lost art in the trade, when the fashion for 
beaver hats for ladies revived a score of years ago, and in conse- 
quence the manufacturers had to search the workhouses and alms- 
houses for old hatters, and called once again to the bench the feeble 
hands which so long had been unemployed, yet whose training in 
the severe apprenticeship of olden days, had made the special work of 
each a matter of second nature, so that genuine ‘‘old beavers’’ could 
again be produced ; but when the demand ceased, the trade again 
fell into decay, and if the call for old hatters should ever again arise 
where shall they be found ? 

The old hadbztant in our back country cherishes his ‘‘ chapeau 
de castor,’’ which, carefully wrapped up the six Godless days, he 
unfolds on the seventh, and covering his grey hairs he totters 
to the village shrine, there to commune for a short hour with the 
old companions of his youth. One by one they drop out of the 
ranks and claim their small portion of the village churchyard. 
Their few worldly possessions are soon divided among a numerous 
progeny, but none care for the legacy of the once treasured chapeau, 
and moths and vermin soon reduce it to dust. 


Though not strictly within the scope of this volume, it certainly 


CASTOROLOGIA. ng 


will help the appreciation of both articles if the difference between 
the old ‘‘ beaver’’ and the present silk hat beexplained. ‘The latter 
depends on a woven silk plush for its outside cover, and this fabric is 
weaved in lengths, having both the appearance and much of the 
character of a loose velvet. The ‘‘ body ’’ or form of the hat is made 
of layers of hatter’s cotton, a soft open texture, which coated with 
shellac, is bound on the block or form, and being thoroughly pliable 
while warm, is nicely adjusted to the desired shape, and then 
allowed to cool and harden. ‘The silk plush is then cut ; a circular 
piece for the crown, a broad band for the sides, and an open circle 
for the brim; these are carefully sewn together, drawn over the 
‘“body ’’ and finished after the fashion of a ‘‘ beaver.”’ 


About the middle of last century the hatting industry seems to 
have been in a very unsatisfactory state. In France, a law forbid- 
ding the export of beaver skins, had the effect of establishing an 
artificial advantage in favor of the French manufacturers. England 
then allowed a drawback of duty on all exported beavers, which 
stimulated an export trade, while a gradual decrease in importation 
made prices too dear for the manufacture of pure beaver felts, and 
we read of mixtures of ‘‘cozey wool, goat’s wool and other materials’? 
in the efforts to produce a hat at a fixed price. 


It should be observed here, that there existed a demand for 
beaver wool for felting purposes other than the uses in the hatter’s 
trade, and there seems to have been a limited quantity employed in 
Russia, in making cloth and other fabrics. 


To return to the skins from which the fleece had been taken :— 
the quantity of these must have been very considerable for many 
years, consequently, it is not surprising that a profitable commercial 
outlet was discovered. The trappers knew that from the cleanings 
and scrapings of beaver skin, a glue was obtainable, and they saved 
the scrapings of the skins to boil down for this purpose, applying it 
to their canoes or wherever a reliable glue was necessary. In 
Hurope, the skins were turned over to the glue-makers, and though 
the article may have answered the purpose well, and may have been 


132 CASTOROLOGIA. 


sufficiently cheap and otherwise desirable, it is not a matter of loss 
to this industry that so few skins are now offered, as the enormous 
supplies of horns and hoofs must easily compensate for any shortage 
consequent on the altered uses of the beaver skins which to-day, the 
furrier claims as well as the fur. It is hard to admit that the use- 
fulness of the beaver has passed, and the world unsympathetically 
banishes it without a thought of the wonderous value in has been. 
But this is an unsentimental age, and progress is no respecter of per- 
sons or animals, so we must face the matter squarely and prepare to 
pay our tribute to the last of the great beaver host which will soon 
leave us forever. 


BEAVER FUR, 


MAGNIFIED 250 DIAMETERS, 


From Photo-micrograph by Mr. Albert Holden, Vice-President Montreal Camera Club. 


HUNTING THE BEAVER. 


LABRADOR. 


A POETICAL EPISTLE. 


‘Fond, in the Summer, on young twigs to browse, 
The social Beavers quit their Winter’s house. 
Around the Lake they cruise, nor fear mishap, 
And sport unheedful of the Furrier’s trap. 


September comes, the Stag’s in season now ; 

Of Ven’son, far the Richest you’ll allow. 

No Long-legg’d, Ewe-neck’d, Cat-hamm’d, Shambling Brute ; 
In him strength, beauty, size, each other suit. 


All this is pleasure ; but a Man of sense, 

J,ooks to his Traps; ’tis they bring in the Pence. 
The Otter-season’s short ; and soon the frost 

Will freeze your Traps, then all your Labour’s lost. 
Of Beaver too, one Week will yield you more, 
Than later, you can hope for, in a Score. 


The Furrier now, with care his Traps looks o’er 
These he puts out in paths, along the Shore, 

For the rich Fox ; although not yet in kind, 

His half-price Skin, our Labour’s worth we find. 
And when the Beaver lands, young Trees to cut, 
Others he sets for his incautious foot. 

On Rubbing-places, too, with nicest care, 

Traps for the Otter, he must next prepare. 

Then Deathfalls, in the old tall Woods he makes, 
With Traps between, and the rich Sable takes. 


Now cast your Eyes around, stern Winter see, 

His progress making, on each fading Tree. 

The yellow leaf, th’ effect of nightly frost, 

Proclaims his Visit, to our dreary Coast. ‘ 
Fish, Fowl, and Ven’son, now our Tables grace ; 
Roast Beaver too, and e’ery Beast of chase. 
Luxurious living this! who’d wish for more? 

Were QUIN alive, he’d haste to LABRADOR !”’ 


—George Cartwright—1i79-. 


CHAPTER XII. 


METHODS EMPLOYED BY THE INDIAN—INTRODUCTION OF THE STEEL-TRAP 
— DISCOVERY OF THE CASTOREUM BAIT— SYSTEMATICALLY EXTER- 
MINATING THE BEAVER—THE ‘‘ BEAVER EATER’’ AND OTHER ENEMIES 
— HUNTERS’ STORIES. 


The Indian in his primitive state could scarcely with justice be 
called a ‘‘ beaver hunter,’’ though in the effort to procure food and 
clothing, he doubtlessly destroyed many of these animals. ‘The ac- 
counts of the life and habits of the North American Indian vary so 
much, that many facts have to be considered which reflect only side- 
lights on the stories, and as testimony, add no more than circum- 
stantial evidence. Think for a moment of the means the Indian 
employed to kill or capture his quarry, and then compare the crude- 
ness of these, with the cunning awakened in the beaver when the 
most ingenious snares of the white man were used. Aboriginal 
tribes the world over have left as types of their native ingenuity, 
the arms they invented for use in warfare or the chase. The 
‘‘ Boomerang’ suggests to the mind the distinct type of the Austral 
negro, and the Patagonian with his ‘‘Bulla’’ is widely separated 
from the Polynesian with his war clubs and war paddles. The na- 
tive weapons of the North American Indian were undoubtedly his 
arrow, spear, and tomahawk, the first two were used mostly in hunt- 
ing, while the last was the indispensable weapon in war, and the 
most typical of the race if taken together with the scalping knife. 
The arrow and spear, when in the most perfect state for use, were 
tipped with horn, which lent itself to nice manipulation even if it 
could only be fashioned by the beaver-tooth chisel, and flint tips also 
were very extensively used. Armed with these, the Indian was 
prepared to meet the demands of his household, but would never 


136 CASTOROLOGIA. 


have made much headway against animals by virtue of his weapons 
alone, and all writers agree that it was by stealth that he accom- 
plished his purpose, whether in war or in peaceful adventures. We 
are told that the Indian used to lie in wait for the beavers, as they 
came from the water to their work in the woods, and by thus get- 
ting within very close range, he was enabled to plunge his arrow 
into the soft flank of the animal, and we can easily imagine that 
this method of destruction was very slow. It is now difficult to be- 
lieve that the ‘‘ deadfall’’ was also used, but no doubt the Indian 
contrived to make this trap a very perfect imitation of nature, or the 
beaver could never have been attracted by it. The nature of the 
beaver’s food makes it difficult to select a bait, and as castoreum and 
its attractive powers were not known to the Indians until long after 
the arrival of the white man, we cannot suppose that this plan was 
much more reliable than the arrow. ‘These considerations, of course, 
have reference to the seasons of the year when the waters were open 
and vegetation more or less abundant, while an extensive variety of 
fish and the flesh of game birds and animals made the tribes less de- 
pendent on the beaver. When, however, the autumn came, and 
passed rapidly into the severe winter experienced in nearly the 
whole of the ‘‘ Indian-Beaver’’ territory, when the little vegetation 
that remained was shrouded under a deep covering of snow, when mi- 
gratory birds, beasts and fishes had abandoned their former haunts, 
then the Indian looked on the beaver colony as a providential ar- 
rangement to supply his wants. A few tribes such as the Hochela- 
gans, would gather their crop of Indian corn and then face the win- 
ter with a feeling of confidence that must surely have aroused the 
spirit of husbandry among their neighbors. Unfortunately, how- 
ever, there were always predatory tribes, who on the swift snowshoe, 
thought it better to steal supplies than to cultivate them, and conse- 
quently, existence was never a matter removed from care in those 
early days. ‘The winter might be more severe than usual and pre- 
vent foraging excursions, or 1t might start earlier and last longer 
than usual, so that the proximity of the well stocked beaver colony 
was a most important consideration. No wandering band of robbers 
would care to plunder this, as the equipments they carried would 
not have made it profitable to risk so much time in the woods, be- 


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CASTOROLOGIA. 139 


sides, if they wanted to collect supplies by their own labors, there 
were plenty of beaver reserves nearer their own homes. 


Let us suppose that the winter has advanced to its height, that 
the heavy frosts and storms have come and bound all nature in 
an icy covering, deep under which the beaver hibernates in its warm 
nest. In the months of January or February, a change sets in and 
the weather moderates ; thisis the opportunity to replenish the lar- 
der, and after many weeks of quiet and laziness, the village is all alive 
and excitement runs high, for a hunting party is being formed to 
visit the beaver colony. Men, women, children and dogs are all 
prepared for the start. Axes, spears, nets and clubs form the equip- 
ment, and the moccasined feet soon tread a pathway through the 
woods, as the party in ‘‘ Indian file’’ follow the chief guide to the 
scene of the coming slaughter. ‘The first step is to quietly cut a series 
of holes around each beaver house or lodge, and through these holes 
place a netting in which the creatures will become entangled when 
they rush from their nest. ‘This preparation being completed, a 
sudden onslaught is made on the lodge; this is the work of the 
squaws, who quickly demolish the structure, driving the occupants 
hurriedly off to their washes or burrows in the bank where they seek 
refuge. A few are killed in the house, others get caught in the net- 
ting and soon drown, still others escape both of these fates and swim 
off for the bank, but they are none the less doomed, for the well 
trained ‘‘ beaver dog,’’ wild with the excitement of the moment fol- 
lows over the ice, the course the poor hunted creature takes in the 
water, and when the beaver enters his burrow, the dog remains bark- 
ing and scratching at the place. How completely the colony was at 
the mercy of the Indian, notwithstanding his crude weapons, must 
clearly be seen, and it was quite in the hunter’s power to annihilate 
the whole colony if he pleased, but in this respect the Indian was 
very provident, and in recognition of the immense value the creature 
represented, he never allowed his beaver reserve to be too closely 
hunted. 


The Baron La Hontan in his valuable ‘‘ Memoires de 1’ Amerique 
Septentrionale’”’ says of the division of the spoils consequent on such 


140 CASTOROLOGIA. 


an excursion as we have already pictured, that each individual was 
allowed to keep to himself all the beavers he dug out of the burrows; 
all that were taken in the nets were divided among the whole com- 
pany of men, the squaws kept any they killed in the lodges. 


The whole Iroquois family, whose various tribes occupied the 
richest quarter of the continent, was as dependent on the beaver as 
the prairie tribes were on the buffalo, and through all the early records 
they are represented pre-eminently as the ‘‘ Beaver Indians.’’ It will 
be remembered that the Hurons, a branch of the Iroquois tribe, who 
occupied the shores of Lake Huron, were among those who claimed 
descent from the great cosmic Beaver and used its effigy as their 
totem. By referring to the map used in Chapter VI., to show the 
former distribution of the beaver, it will be seen how extensive were 
the ‘‘ Beaver reserves of the Iroquois’’ and of ‘‘ The allies of the 
French ’’—‘* Chasse de Castor des Iroquois ;’’ ‘“‘ Chasse de Castor 
des amis des Frangois.’’? The accompanying map from the ‘‘ Docu- 
mentary History of New York” is of special local interest, as it re- 
calls the fact that where now populous settlements live in peaceful 
husbandry, and where many a busy manufacturing town now stands, 
not long since was the home of the beaver; and that though not a 
representative remains now in all the neighbourhood, the site was 
once so thronged that the wisdom of the Indians selected it as a 
‘‘Beaver Hunting Country ’’—‘‘Pazs de Chasse de Castor.’’ No more 
interesting feature can be found in the whole study of the beaver 
economy, than that afforded by the beaver hunting reserves. In 
some cases in the interior of our country, near the height of land, 
these hunting grounds are still recognized as the rightful property 
of certain Indian families, and curiously, the line of descent is on 
the mother’s side, so that travellers relate how many an old de- 
crepit squaw is honored and propitiated for favors from her beaver 
reserve. ‘These reserves were held with as much exclusiveness as a 
freehold estate in England, and to trespass or to poach on them 
meant to jeopardise one’s life. The question of ownership involved 
all the mystic relations of the social career of the Indian—genealo- 
gies, tribal affinities, questions of caste and preference; but also 
rested greatly in the first instance on the right of might; as their 


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CASTOROLOGIA. 143 


war-path was invariably the court of appeal among the Indians. 
Let us consider briefly the ‘‘ Coughsagrage,’’ or the Beaver Hunt- 
ing Country, on the accompanying map, and trace its history. We 
have already seen how the early settlements of Europeans kept, 
of necessity, close to the great waterways, and from many accounts 
of the early writers it can be fully ascertained how powerful, and 
sometimes how cruel the Indians were ; how, at times, their malice 
led them not only to individual assaults, but even prompted them to 
butcher whole communities, as in the case of the Lachine Massacre, 
in 1689. It will thus be seen that certain deference towards the 
laws of the Indian was exacted from these early settlers, and among 
these laws, that relating to the rights of beaver hunting would be 
carefully regarded ; so that, while the white man held his tempting 
stock of merchandise the Indian controlled the hunting of the beaver. 
The district now under consideration was a very rugged, wild and 
mountainous territory (a portion of the Adirondacks), well watered 
and well wooded; and at that period (1749) in a primeval state, 
offering a paradise for beavers ; a small territory, yet one in which 
almost any stream or lake could support a colony. Into this dis- 
trict the Indians made their excursions, and great festivals must 
have followed their occasional hunts, for there was the trader, wait- 
ing with his varied store to make exchange for every pelt, and by 
some small gift, trying to urge another visit to the reserve. 


When the fur trader went first among the Indians, the beavers 
were very plentiful and the wants of the Indians comparatively few; 
but gradually the trader overcame the provident nature of the In- 
dian, till when ‘‘ fire-water’’ had become a regular article of barter, 
he was so changed that no thought seemed to possess his mind but 
the desire for more liquor, and he became debauched and debased, 
and completely under the power of the white man, for losing his 
self-control, he hunted expressly to try and satisfy a ceaseless thirst, 
and drew from a limited fund to meet an insatiable want. 


It has been shown that in winter the methods employed in hunt- 
ing, placed the beaver entirely at the mercy of the Indian, but when 
extreme measures were instituted, the creeks and streams were 


144 CASTOROLOGIA. 


) 


closely staked across, a method called ‘‘ trenching,’’ whereby every 
inhabitant of the colony was imprisoned from the first move, 
and actual extermination alone satisfied the greed of the hunters. 
Soon the vast country of the Iroquois was ruined, and then 
the march northward and westward was pressed till the shores of 
the Arctic and the Pacific stopped the hasty rush ; ‘‘the Iroquois, 
once the careful husbander of the beaver, now became the most 
inveterate hunter.’’ 


In the manuscript of Mr. David Thompson, to which reference 
has already been made, a very thoughtful survey of the position of 
affairs shows that too much color cannot be given to the period of 
1784-1821, designated the period of Anglo-Canadian rivalries. 
About the year 1794, the Indians of Canada and New Brunswick, 
not satisfied with their achievements in beaver hunting, and observ- 
ing the success of the white man in catching foxes, lynx, sables and 
other animals with the steel trap, turned their attention to the pos- 
sibility of employing this means to augment their store of beaver 
skins. ‘The one obstruction in the way was that no bait with suffi- 
ciently attractive powers had yet been discovered, the vegetable diet 
of the beaver and its constant and varied supply from the woods 
about it, made the case difficult to meet. At first the traps were 
placed under water in the run-ways of the beaver, the incipient 
canal, but without luring the beavers to the spot. No very decided 
advantage was thus gained, while the outlay for the steel traps and 
the inconvenience of carrying the heavy outfit for miles through the 
the woods, had certain disadvantages compared with the awkward 
wooden trap, which cost nothing but a few moment’s work on ma- 
terial which everywhere was close at hand. 


Experiments were made, mixtures of various kinds were tried, 
till at length it was found that those compounds into which ‘“‘cas- 
toreum’’ had been introduced, filled more than the most ardent ex- 
pectations, and what “‘ fire-water’’ was to the Indian, so these cas- 
toreum mixtures were to the beavers. ‘Their infatuation was with- 
out bounds, and the results which followed cannot be more graphic- 
ally told than in Mr. Thompson's own words :— 


CASTOROLOGIA. 145 


‘<The secret of this bait was soon spread ; every Indian procured 
from the trader four to six steel traps, the weight of one was about 
six to eight pounds; all labour was now at an end, the hunter 
moved about at pleasure, with his traps and infallible bait of castor- 
eum. Of the infatuation of this animal for castoreum, I saw several 
instances. A trap was negligently fastened by its small chain to 
the stake, to prevent the beaver taking away the trap when caught ; 
it slipped and the beaver swam away with the trap, and it was looked 
upon as lost. ‘Two nights after he was taken in a trap, with the 
other trap fast to his thigh. Another time, a beaver passing over a 
trap to get the castoreum, had his hind leg broken, with his teeth he 
cut the broken leg off, and went away. We concluded he would 
not come again, but two nights afterwards, he was found fast in a 
trap; in every case tempted by the castoreum. ‘The stick was al- 
ways licked or sucked clean, and it seemed to act as a soporific, as 
they remained more than a day without coming out of their houses. 
The Nepissings, the Algonquins and Iroquois Indians, having ex- 
hausted their own districts, now spread themselves over these coun- 
tries and as they destroyed, the beaver moved forward to the north- 
ward and westward. ‘The natives, the Napataways did not in the 
least molest them; the Chippeways and other tribes made use of 
traps of steel, and of the castoreum. For several years all those 
Indians were rich, the women and children, as well as the men were 
covered with silver brooches, ear-rings, wampum, beads and other 
trinkets. Their mantles were of fine scarlet cloth, and all was finery 
and dress. ‘The canoes of the fur trader were loaded with packs of 
beaver, till the abundance of the article lowered the London prices. 
Every intelligent man saw the poverty that would follow the de- 
struction of the beaver, but there were no chiefs to control it; always 
perfect liberty and equality. Four years after almost the whole of 
these extensive countries became poor, and with difficulty procured 
the first necessaries of life, and in this state they remain, and pro- 
bably for ever. A worn out field may be manured and again made 
fertile ; but the beaver once destroyed cannot be replaced. ‘They 
were the gold coin of the country, with which the necessaries of life 
were purchased.’’ 

While the country was being impoverished in this way, the pro- 


L 


146 CASTOROLOGIA. 


fits made by the traders were so great that it was reasonably de- 
clared that some of the most colossal fortunes of England, France and 
America, were founded on the beaver traffic. Mr. Fred. W. Lucas 
in his ‘‘ Shreds of History,’’ which gives minute details of this period, 
after quoting the schedule of barter in beaver skins, says, ‘‘ these 
prices are reckoned to have yielded a profit of 2,000 per cent.”’ 


The castoreum bait has never been superseded by any other, and 
every trapper who now attempts to capture the beaver is provided 
with his bottle of ‘‘medicine,’’ as it is called, which consists of a 
vegetable mixture varying with the fancy of the individual, but in- 
variably depending for its merit on the magic power of castoreum. 


BEAVER TRAP, WITH CLUTCH. 


At great variance with the former wise method of allowing suffi- 
cient beavers to remain in a neighborhood to perpetuate the race, is 
the advice given in a ‘‘’Trapper’s Guide,’’ published recently in 
New York, in which the author says :—‘‘A full grown family of 
beavers, as I have said before, consists of the parents (male and 
female), their three year old offspring, the two year olds, and the 
yearlings—four generations of four different sizes—occupying one 
hut, and doing business in one pond. When a trapper comes on 
such a pond, or one that he has reason to believe is inhabited by a 
large number of beavers, his object should be to take them all.’’ 
‘This same writer offers a steel trap armed with a powerful “‘ clutch,”’ 
designed specially to,hold the beaver’s body, and prevent it tearing 
the feet from the trap; for the legs are so short that the beaver fre- 
quently manages to escape. ‘The ordinary style of the beaver trap 


CASTOROLOGIA. 147 


is illustrated in Chapter X., being that carried by the old ‘‘ Trapper 
and Trader.’’ 


In 1814, a letter from a North-Wester at the Mackenzie River 
Department, Great Slave Lake, which appears in L. R. Masson’s 
‘‘Les Bourgeois de la Compagnie du Nord-Ouest,’’ contains the in- 
formation that ‘‘the Indians complain at the want of beaver, (the 
Iroquois having ruined the country,)’’ and in a note the author 
explains that the North-Westers often took up the Iroquois as 
hunters, and ‘‘these Indians having no interest in the country, 
hunted recklessly and at all seasons. The cry of ‘no beaver’ is the 
only ground for reducing the number of posts on Peace River, and 
relinquishing the whole department of McKenzie’s River.”’ 


Having thus shown the artificial destruction of the beaver, it 
might be well, at this, point, to refer to some of the natural enemies 
which helped to thin their colonies ; and among these none have at- 
tained such notoriety as the wolverine (gzo /uscus). From the days 
of Olaus Magnus, the ‘‘ gulus’’—or glutton—as it was then named, 
has been the object of most damning superstitions, and even to-day 
the animal is most popularly known as the ‘‘ glutton.’’? The Hud- 
son’s Bay traders called it the ‘‘ quick hatch,’’ and the French tra- 
ders used the corruption ‘‘carcajou,’’ both titles having a long list of 
variations and both supposed to have arisen from the same source, 
the Indian name ‘‘ quickwahay,’’ which, in J. Long’s valuable In- 
dian vocabulary, published in 1791, is translated as the ‘‘ beaver 
eater.’? The animal furnishes many interesting features for study, 
and, on better acquaintance, proves itself by no means deserving of 
the unenviable notoriety it has achieved, though all the French tra- 
ders held it so much in disrepute as to call it ‘‘ enfant du diable’’— 
‘‘ child of the'devil.’”? It was only the size of the adult beaver 
but proportionately very powerful, and possessed of that blood- 
thirsty appetite which distinguishes the weasels, ferrets, and all the 
representatives of this family. Consequently the defenceless beaver 
was a rich source of supply, and by lying in wait in the woods, or 
assaulting the lodges, doubtless many a victim was secured, and 
though the stories concerning the ravages are usually supposed to be 


148 CASTOROLOGIA. 


much exaggerated, there are grounds for believing that the ‘‘ beaver 
eater’’ was a very successful competitor with the beaver hunter, and 
its distribution and disappearance have been strangely coincident 
with that of the beaver. 


Besides the wolverine, both the bear and the otter are said to be 
enemies of the beaver, and testimony points pretty clearly to the 
latter devouring the young beavers. As to the bears, their depre- 
dations are most likely to occur in the Spring, when awakening 
from their long night’s sleep, their appetites are most voracious, 
and beaver meat would, probably, be sought for as a necessity as 
well as a delicacy ; through the Summer the bear would prefer the 
rich variety of vegetable food and the occasional meal of wild honey, 
while in the late Fall he fattens on fruits, berries and nuts ; and then 
selects his quarters for his hibernation. 


It is an unfortunate thing that the greater part of the knowledge 
we possess of the habits and manners of animals is based on inform- 
ation furnished by trappers and fur traders, for as Dr. John D. God- 
man says, a ‘‘hunter’s story’’ is too often synonymous with an 
English word of three letters. In Godman’s ‘‘ American Natural 
History’ the author devotes seventeen pages to what he calls the 
‘‘Habulous History of the Beaver,’’ which he introduces by admit- 
ting that this part of the subject is richer in materials than any 
other; and that there is ‘‘ one circumstance peculiar to the history 
of the beaver which has thrown over it more delusion than in the 
case of almost any other animal. ‘To these persons (the fur trader 
and trapper) the beaver is a most important object, and regarded 
with a degree of admiration and superstition exactly proportioned to 
their ignorance. ‘To become acquainted with the peculiarities of a 
species both nocturnal and exceedingly timid and vigilant, requires 
years of patient and assiduous attention.’’ Further on, the author 
accuses those who from their circumstances should have acquired a 
knowledge of these matters, of taking a malicious pleasure in com- 
municating ‘‘the most false and marvellous relations ’’ and the fol- 
lowing note, wonderfully suggestive of the application of salt to a 
bird’s tail, may be taken as an example :—‘‘ Their tail is covered 


__ The Quick Hatch,or Wokyerene = 


SSS 


QUICKWAHAY—THE ‘‘ BEAVER EATER.” 


(GULO LUSCUS—THE WOLVERINE OR GLUTTON.) 


CASTOROLOGIA. I51 


over with scales, being, like a soal, about six inches broad and ten 
inches long, which he uses as a rudder to steer with when he swims 
to catch fish; and though his teeth are so terrible, yet when men 


have seized his tail, they can govern the animal as they please.”’ 


Beltrami, who wrote ‘‘ a Découverte des Sources du Mississippi,”’ 
must have provoked his guides sadly before the following admis- 
sions were made. ‘‘ The beavers are divided into tribes, and some- 
times into small bands only, of which each has its chief, and order 
and discipline reign there, much more, perhaps, than among the In- 
dians, or even among civilized nations. Each tribe has its territory. 
If any stranger is caught trespassing, he is brought before the chief, 
who, for the first offence, punishes him ad correctionem, and for the 
second, deprives him of his tail, which is the greatest misfortune 
which can happen to a beaver, for this tail is their cart, upon which 
they transport, wherever it is desired, mortar, stones, provisions, 
etc. ; and it is also the trowel, which it resembles in shape, used 
by them in building. This infraction of the laws of nations is con- 
sidered among them so great an outrage, that the whole tribe of the 
mutilated beaver side with him, and set off immediately to take ven- 
gence for it. In this contest the victorious party, using the rights 
of war, drives the vanquished from their quarters, takes possession 
of them, and places a provisional garrison, and finally establishes 
there a colony of young beaver. The ‘Great Hare,’ at Red Lake, 
wished to make me believe that, having come to the spot where two 
tribes of beaver had just been engaged in battle, he found about 
fifteen dead, or dying on the field; and other Indians, Sioux and 
Chippeways, have also assured me that they have obtained valuable 
booty in similar circumstances.”’ 


When such accounts were current and accepted, nay, even 
expected among the marvellous experiences of those who recorded 
their adventures, we can understand that it was ‘‘ difficult for a tra- 
veller to publish his travels without speaking of the beaver, although 
he should have travelled only in Africa, where there are none.”’ 


The number of writers on the beaver is legion, while accounts of 


152 CASTOROLOGIA. 


actual observers are so very limited that each record is of great 
value, especially now that the opportunities for study are so quickly 
passing ; and it is a pleasure to refer to the article by H. P. Wells, 
in Harper's Magazine for January, 1889, which furnishes a chapter 
on beaver hunting, as carefully written as it is beautifully illustrated. 


The next generation must accept our statements as we accept 
the accounts of the European beaver, and must regard our descrip- 
tions with the same credulity as we do the statement that ‘‘ beaver 
hunting, anciently, was a favorite sport on the continent, if not in 
England.”’ 


THE DEADFALL 
(AS NOW USED FOR MINK OR SABLE.) 


EXPERIMENTS IN DOMESTICATION. 


““We thus recognize in the beaver, which 
has disappeared within recent generations from 
so many of its Canadian haunts, and now lin- 
gers in greatly diminished numbers only in the 
least accessible waters, the survivor of a species 
familiar to man in remote centuries, rendered 
popular in the fables of Asop, and noted by 
Herodotus, Hippocrates, Pliny and Strabo. The 
last relics of the extinct Dodo have acquired a 
value the living animal never could have pos- 
sessed ; and the same reasons that confer an in- 
terest on the evidences of the extinction of 
species, as illustrating the like process still go- 
ing on which geology reveals in the whole past 
economy of life, render the beaver of the Old 
and the New World worthy of special notice, as 
destined seemingly, like the Aboriginal Indian 
of this continent, to pass away from the records 
of living nature. 


Sir Daniel Wilson—s858. 


CHAPTER: Saini 


ATTEMPTS TO PRESERVE THE EUROPEAN BEAVER—TAME BEAVERS—THE 
MARQUIS OF BUTE’S BEAVER COLONY—BEAVER HUNTING GROUNDS 
OF THE INDIANS—THE Hupson’s Bay BEAVER RESERVES—‘‘ BEAVER 
FARMING ’’—LIFE IN ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS. 


From the earliest history of the beaver in the Old World, which 
was written at the time when civilization had already made much 
headway, and was still spreading over Europe in great waves, over- 
whelming barbarism and effacing primeval nature forever within its 
limits, we gather that the preservation of the beaver from the de- 
struction which appeared imminent, was a matter of much moment. 


A’s late as the reign of Frederick the Great, of Prussia, (1712—- 
1788), beavers were gathered together for this purpose, but as in 
every former instance, the enterprise was a failure, and the life of the 
European beaver was not in the least extended by this experiment. 
Some reason must be found for the failure to protect the beaver satis- 
factorily, and investigation into the matter might be profitable. 
The young beaver is easily tamed ; beavers are frequently brought 
alive into our settlements, and are often made pets of, and allowed 
the liberties usually afforded to our domestic guardian, the dog. 
The number of individual cases recorded, if merely scheduled, would 
make a full chapter, and it would fill a portly volume to do justice 
to the many eccentric performances of these pets. ‘The legs of tables 
and chairs soon attract the beaver as suitable substitutes for the deli- 
cate undergrowth of the forest, and boots and shoes, brushes, books, 
and other small articles, both ornamental and useful, serve to dam 
up the doorway, or to form a lodge under the bed or some other 
article of furniture; each work showing distinctly the instinct to 
build. So little choice of material do they seem to exercise, that 


156 CASTOROLOGIA. 


on the evidence of Mr. Lewis H. Morgan, we repeat the following 
extraordinary example :— 


‘In spring, summer and fall, the usual place of setting traps for 
beavers, is upon the dam. ‘The trapper avails himself of the well- 
known habit of this dam builder to repair, at once, any breach made 
in the structure, over which his supervision is constant. Captain 
Wilson, before referred to, on one occasion, set three traps in this 
manner on the Grass Lake dam, using stakes instead of the pole 
slide, with the following results: ‘Two days afterwards he found, 
on going to the traps, the three breaches fully repaired. ‘Two ofthe 
traps held each a beaver, and both drowned; but notwithstanding 
the calamity that had befallen them, other beavers had finished their 
work. ‘The third trap had disappeared from sight. He found the 
chain still held by the stake, which showed, on running it up, that 
the trap was buried in the breach made in the dam, under the ma- 
terials used in its repair. Upon drawing it out, he discovered a duck 
in the trap, which had been caught and drowned, and that both the 
duck and the trap had been carried by the beavers into the breach 
and there buried.”’ 


The beaver possesses not only indomitable perseverance, but for 
its size has very great strength, and these, together with its shortness 
of limb, make it difficult to hold in a trap. For this reason the 
hunter aims either to drown the animal, or to catch it securely by 
the hind foot, which is proportionately large. Sometimes the beaver 
gets its fore foot into the trap, and instead of rushing into deep water 
and drowning, it struggles to escape even if the limb or part of it be 
lost in the struggle. When, however, as is not unfrequently the 
case, the hunter finds the beaver alive in the trap, it is completely 
tamed through exhaustion and despair, and may with safety be 
handled and taken from the trap. ‘The beaver in its wild state re- 
cognizes man as an enemy, and constantly seeks to escape from his 
presence, and though in captivity this fear is forgotten, yet it must 
always be considered most timid and shy. 


The great value once attached to the beaver, and the popular 


CASTOROLOGIA. 157 


conception of its engineering works, doubtless led to all the early and 
most of the recent efforts to preserve or perpetuate the species. The 
original life of our domestic animals and pets—horses, cows, sheep, 
pigs, dogs, cats and pigeons—furnishes the biologist with problems 
of the utmost interest ; while the changes which have followed the 
domestication of animals within the range of our times, baffle even 
the most advanced speculations. The ostrich and camel in Africa ; 
the elephant in Asia ; the reindeer in Northern Europe and America, 
and the llama in South America, serve to show how nature accom- 
modates her children to altered circumstances. This quality of 
adaptation is the fundamental requirement in the matter of domesti- 
cation, and implies, firstly, that the animal can thrive in great changes 
of climate and environment ; secondly, that it can adapt itself to a 
varying food supply; and thirdly, that its nervous system must be 
strong and improvable. By applying these tests to the beaver, it 
will be found that it does not come within the requirements, for, as 
a rule, it does not wander much, though originally it was very 
widely distributed, and its life is so much dependent on a full supply 
of fresh water, that this alone would prevent domestication except 
under very special circumstances. ‘The question of food is also an 
important consideration, for though under semi-domestication, the 
beaver is found to thrive on most vegetable substances, still nature 
prompts the appetite for bark, and to satisfy this, a constant supply 
of fresh wood of a rather limited kind would be required, and even 
when this want is provided for, the condition of the teeth soon fails, 
and might be taken as an infallible sign of degeneration under altered 
circumstances. Finally, in the chapter on its anatomy, it will be 
shown that the beaver ranks singularly low in the scale of Compara- 
tive Psychology, and though this may seem contrary to the popular 
conception, it must be acknowledged that beavers have never made 
themselves conspicuous by any exhibition of acquired performances, 
but only display inherited instinct. The plausibility of the following 
story is interesting, though its truth is not vouched for. A tame 
beaver, around a camp, was becoming objectionable through its pro- 
pensity for cutting everything in the camp, until the followers 
started it on a rough pile of felled trees; the beaver was made 
perfectly happy, and labored away, keeping its teeth in good shape 


158 CASTOROLOGIA. 


and also providing the camp with abundant firewood. Another ac- 
count of a tame beaver, which appears in Wilson’s ‘‘ Karly Notices 
of the Beaver,’ is told by a Mr. John Langton, and shows the fate 
of most of these creatures. ‘The owner of this beaver had no furni- 
ture to gnaw, being an old trader married to a squaw, and living 
more like an Indian than a white man. ‘‘ His favourite was quite 
tame, and very playful, and though he lived on the shore of Buck- 
horn Lake, the beaver seldom took to the water. It used to lie be- 
fore the fire as contentedly as a dog; and it was not till winter set 
in that it became a nuisance. Poor old Bill McHugh’s house was 
well ventilated, an open chink between the logs being thought very 
little of by him and his family ; but the beaver was very impatient 
of such negligence, and used to work all night at making things air- 
tight and comfortable without much discrimination as to the mate- 
rials it employed. If Bill or his guests went to bed leaving their 
moccasins and tichigans drying before the fire, they were certain to 
be found in the morning stowed away in some chink or cranny ; and 
stray blankets and articles of clothing were torn up by the industri- 
ous beaver for the same purpose. ‘The consequence was that the 
poor pet was at length sacrificed ; its body went into the old trader’s 
pot, and its skin to market.”’ 


These anecdotes of tame beavers could be much extended if 
necessary, but enough has been said to show how thoroughly domes- 
tic the beaver becomes, (using this word toimply its adaptability to 
a life with man as a member of his household), yet when beavers 
are gathered together in colonies or families, and allowed only par- 
tial freedom, they do not thrive. Of the ultimate results of the early 
attempts in Russia, Germany and France to preserve the beaver, 
history only tells us that they failed, but without exact records of 
these experiments, they are of no practical value towards the solution 
of the problem, why, in the face of powerful legislation to preserve 
them, did the beavers disappear? The more recent attempt made by 
the Marquis of Bute, to establish a colony of Canadian beavers, near 
Rothesay, in Scotland, is a matter of intense interest at this juncture, 
and as the story of the founding of the colony, together with some 
details of its subsequent condition, has been told by Joseph Stuart 


CASTOROLOGIA. 159 


Black, the Gamekeeper of the I’state, we reprint the following notes 
from his report, which bears date 1887 :— 


‘“TIn 1874, the Marquis of Bute having obtained four beavers, 
caused a space of from three to four acres in extent to be enclosed in 
the wood between Meikle Kilchattan and Drumreach, and placed 
them there. These not succeeding, his lordship, on the 6th Janu- 
ary, 1875, obtained seven others. Of these, four succeeded so 
well that in 1878 I was certain of sixteen being alive, which makes 
an average increase of four each season. ‘There is a further increase 
this season, but to what extent I cannot say. 


‘* Arriving as they did in midwinter, these little animals, I can 
assure you, hada pretty hard time of it. However, after a few days’ 
rest, having viewed the situation, they set vigorously to work to 
make themselves comfortable, and began to construct a dam* by 
forming a dyke or embankment across a small moorland stream 
running through the enclosure; at the same time they commenced 
to build a house to live in. 


‘“’'The materials of which the dyke is constructed are wood, grass, 
mud, and a few stones which are used for the purpose of keeping the 
grass and smaller pieces of wood in their place until more is built on 
the top of them. They have continued raising this embankment to 
a certain extent every year, until it has now attained the following 
dimensions, viz. :—length, seventy feet ; height in the deepest part, 
fully eight feet; breadth of base at deepest part, from fifteen to 
twenty feet, sloped inside, not straight across, but finely arched 
against the stream, so that it may the more easily resist the great 
pressure of water which it has to bear—perfectly level, so that when 
a spate of water comes down it may run evenly over the top from 
side to side. So substantially have they built it that no material 
damage has occured to it from all the floods that have passed over 
it. They use a number of the larger pieces of wood as props, by 
fixing the thick end into the ground and the small end on the top, 


* The word ‘“‘dam”’ is used throughout this account to signify the pool formed by the 
dyke or embankment. 


160 CASTOROLOGIA. 


then build on the top of these, so as to fix them firmly. It would 
require to be seen to appreciate the great skill displayed in its con- 
struction; as I think it would tax the energies of a Bateman or a 
Gale to make a better with the same materials. If any damage does 
occur, they immediately find it out and repair it. I have seen them 
swim along the edge of the embankment, carefully examining it to 
ascertain the part most needful of repairs, then go to work with a will 
to rectify it. ‘The dam is now seventy-eight yards long of still water. 


‘* Besides the dam already mentioned, upon which they bestow 
great care in its construction, owing to their house being built in it, 
they have other seven, some larger, some smaller ; one of them hav- 
ing anembankment 105 feet long, and an average depth of three 
feet. These serve as places of refuge if the beavers are disturbed 
when out roaming about in quest of food or felling the trees, also as 
a waterway for conveying their food, when storing it past for winter. 


‘‘In the construction of their dwelling the same kind of mate- 
rials are used. As to how they build it: you must understand that 
for a considerable distance along one side of the stream or burn the 
ground rises in a steep bank, but about twenty yards above where 
they began to build the embankment for the dam, there was a small 
level spot which they selected. Then at the bottom of the water they 
burrowed in three or four feet, rose up eight or ten inches, scooped 
out a space large enough to hold themselves, broke a hole in the 
surface about six inches in diameter, then began to cover it over 
with sticks, grass, and a few stones, always keeping it open in the 
centre by placing a few sticks perpendicularly, so as to act as a ven- 
tilator, and as the water rose in the dam and the family increased 
they continued to build and enlarge the house, cutting their way up 
and forming their chamber or chambers inside, until it had now at- 
tained the following dimensions at the surface of the water (which is 
here about four feet deep), viz.—height about five feet, length and 
breadth about nine feet, having a door at both sides placed at the 
bottom of the water so as to prevent their natural enemies from fol- 
lowing them, chief among which is the wolverine, although happily 
for both them and us there are none of these here to disturb them. 


s 


CASTOROLOGIA. 161 


‘To secure themselves against the winter storms they commence 
about the middle of September and give their house a coat of mud 
all over. It is with the mouth and forefeet, which are formed more 
like hands than feet, that they convey the materials of which their — 
embankment and house are made. ‘hey do not use their tail, as was 
at one time said, for plastering on the mud, but their forefeet, with 
which they very carefully stow it in among the sticks. As to what 
they use for a bed to lie on, it is wood shavings, which they prepare 
in the following manner: after using the bark for food, they place the 
stick on end, holding it with both feet a bit apart, then with their 
teeth pare it down into fine shavings. They are very cleanly in 
their habits, as they often clean out their house, not casting away 
the refuse, but using it either on the top of the house or the embank- 
ment of the dam to patch up a hole. 


‘“'Their food in winter consists wholly of the bark of trees ; had 
they a choice I have no hesitation in saying they would prefer the 
willow and poplar. These not growing in the enclosure, they had 
just to adapt themselves to circumstances, and take a share of what 
trees they could get, consisting of oak, plane tree, elm, thorn, hazel, 
Scotch fir and larch. Of the hardwood, they seem to prefer elm to 
plane tree, then oak, of which they eat sparingly. Of the firs, the 
Scotch has the preference ; as for the larch they did not touch it till 
early in 1878, since which time they have taken to it very well. 
As for the alder and spruce fir, they eat almost nothing of them. 
Along with all these, we have always given them a supply of willow. 
In summer they eat freely of the common bracken, likewise grass, 
and young shoots of every description growing in the place. In 
autumn they grub up and feed upon roots, chief among which is the 
tormentil (Potentilla tormentilla), better known to Scotch people as 
‘‘tormentil root,’’ and the young tender shoots of the common spurts 
before they appear above ground, at the same time cutting down a 
tree now and again and feeding on the bark. 


‘‘ As to the tree-felling it is all done at night ; the number which 
they have cut down amounts now to 187 trees from five feet in circum- 
ference downwards. ‘These are all forest trees, besides a great many 


M 


162 CASTOROLOGIA. 


smaller bushes. Before cutting down a tree, they mark it all round 
at the height at which they wish to cut it. They begin to cut at 
the opposite side to which they intend the tree should fall, invariably 
making it fall with the top to the water. Where they grow near 
enough, they make them fall across the stream or dam, causing 
many to suppose that they are so placed to form a bridge, whereby 
they may cross from one side of the water to another. They do not 
require a bridge, they can swim, and rather than cross over a pros- 
trate tree they dive under it. My impression is they are so placed 
to break the current of the water when the stream is flooded ; also if 
convenient they take advantage of building a dam where some of the 
trees lie across the water. Those lying across in their principal dam 
are utilized in storing up their winter food, these stores being built 
on the upper side of the trees, so that they cannot be swept away 
with the winter floods. 


‘“ When cutting the trees they use their teeth, on the same prin- 
ciple that a forester does an axe, always keeping plenty of open space, 
so that they can cut past the centre of the tree on one side before 
beginning on the other. It is in the latter end of autumn they com- 
mence to cut down trees for winter food. Having cut them down 
they speedily strip off the branches, cutting them into lengths to 
suit their strength for dragging them away to the dam, where they 
store them in different places near their house, so that they may 
have sufficient food, although the dam may be frozen over, or the 
ground covered with snow. What is left of the trunks of the trees 
that they cannot drag away, they feed on at leisure, eating the bark. 


‘Besides the work above ground which I have tried to describe, 
they have done a great amount of underground work, such as cutting 
channels in their dams, and making burrows. ‘These burrows they 
make by cutting a road from the middle of the dam for several yards 
into the dry ground, where they scoop out a dome-shaped burrow 
from eight to ten inches above the level of the road, then cut a hole 
through the surface and cover it over with sticks and grass so as to 
act asa ventilator. Here they live and feed in security and content- 
ment. Some of the roads to these burrows are from fifteen to twenty 


|} \} 
| | | i 
AW ee 
ANI 


Hh 
Wahi 
A 
f 


THE MARQUIS OF BUTE’S BEAVER ENCLOSURE-—JULY, 1889. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 165 


yards long, and so level that the water follows them in the whole 
length. 


‘“As to the time they bring forth their young, from my own 
knowledge I cannot say. I have seen it stated to be January, and 
also the beginning of May. I can say nothing against that, judging 
from the size of the young when I first saw them in the second week 
of June, the oldest litter being about the size of a full-grown rabbit, 
and the youngest not half that size. 


**From careful observation, I have good reasons for believing 
they have only one at a birth. One thing I am certain of, they have 
two litters in the season. Beavers are a class of animals that are 
very timid, their sight, scent and hearing very keen, so much so, that 
it is with great caution they can be approached near enough to see 
what they are doing. ‘They are under cover all day from seven 
o'clock in the morning till seven in the evening. When one comes 
out, it floats on the surface of the water, carefully surveying the 
whole scene around, sniffing the air, and if no danger is appre- 
hended it dives and disappears. In two or three minutes, a number 
of the colony begin to appear and disperse themselves, some to swim 
and sport about in the dam, while others go in quest of food. Ifone 
of them espies danger it strikes one sharp, loud stroke on the water 
with its tail, when all of them that are out come tumbling into the 
dam and disappear. 


“They will allow of no laziness in any member of the colony ; if 
any such there be, they are beaten and driven out to live as best 
they may. ‘These so driven out generally roam about, making a 
burrow here and there, where they live for a few months and die.’’ 


Such records are most valuable, but unfortunately, errors of ob- 
servation or of judgment in recording, necessitate some comment in 
presenting them together with conflicting evidence. A visit to the 
‘‘enclosure’’ in July 1889, gave an impression of a condition of 
things quite different to that reported, which may be substantiated 


by reference to the accompanying engraving, copied from photo- 


166 CASTOROLOGIA. 


graphs taken at the time. Mr. Black had died about a year before, 
and the beavers were placed under the charge of the game keeper, 
Mr. John Wilson, who stated that the number of animals, as estim- 
ated by the amount of work done, had been much exaggerated ; 
that in 1883, when his lordship wished to send to the Fisheries Ex- 
hibition specimens of the beaver (whose tail had been described as 
‘‘a true portion of a fish attached to the body of a quadruped’’), 
the enclosure was completely ransacked before a couple could be 
secured. ‘The trees in the enclosure, some measuring over sixty 
inches in circumference, covered the ground in all directions giving 
the place an appearance of desolation, which at first was most dis- 
appointing. ‘Iwo trees standing near the railing (Shown in the en- 
graving) having been partially cut by the beavers, the tops were cut 
off to save any damage which might have been caused by them 
falling on to the railing; unquestionably ¢hese trees would not have 
fallen with their tops to the water. 


The question of the birth of young beavers is still the cause of 
much speculation, and the most opposite opinions are stated with 
dogmatic certainty ; yet, no satisfactory proof is offered to establish 
the facts, and many interesting points remain to be settled. No 
scientific proof has ever been offered to substantiate the claims as to 
whether beavers are born with their eyes closed or open, and tes- 
timony is about equally divided on this point; but as to a second 
litter in the season, the preponderance of evidence is unmistakably 
against the theory, notwithstanding Mr. Black’s expressed certainty. 


Universally, the beaver stands as the type of industry, and the 
works we have described must have given conclusive proof of this ; 
but unfortunately, fable has considered it necessary to create a 
‘« baresscux’? in the beaver paradise, as if for the pleasure of banish- 
ing it to outer darkness. Mr. Black saw beavers wandering about 
the enclosure, evidently outcasts from the little colony, yet, he was 
utterly without grounds for asserting that these creatures had been 
banished because they were lazy, 


Cartwright’s opinions on the same subject were as follows, 


CASTOROLOGIA. 167 


‘*Sometimes a single beaver lives by itself, and is then called a 
hermit or terrier. Whatever may have been the cause which has 
separated these individuals from society, it is certain that they 
always have a black mark on the inside of the skin upon their backs, 
which is called a saddle, and distinguishes them from the others. 
‘This separation from society may arise from their fidelity and con- 
stancy to each other, and that, having by some accident lost their 
mate, they will not readily pair again. The mark on the back may 
proceed from the want of a companion to keep that part warm.’’ 
Cartwright also claimed to have the advantage of personal observa- 
tion, but Dr. Godman says of him, ‘‘ this actual observer repeats all 
the trash of preceding hearsay-writers nearly in their own words.’’ 


Le Pére de Charlevoix, author of the ‘‘ Journal d’un Voyage dans 
? Amérique Septentrionale’’ (1744), in writing from Quebec, rst March, 
1721, discourses at length on the curiosities of the country, of which 
‘‘the most singular thing that is seen is the beaver. The savages 
were formerly persuaded—if one were to believe some stories—that 
the beavers were a kind of reasonable animal, which had its laws, its 
government and its particular language ; that this amphibious peo- 
ple made choice of commanders, who, in the common work, distri- 
buted to each its task, posted sentinels to give warning of the ap- 
proach of an enemy, punished or exiled the idle. These so-called 
exiles are apparently those which are called burrowing beavers, 
which in fact live separate from the others, do not work, and live 
under the ground, where their sole object is to carefully make a 
covered road leading to the water. They can be recognized by the 
small quantity of hair that they have on their backs, the result 
evidently of rubbing themselves constantly against the earth. In 
addition to this they are thin, the effect of their idleness; they are 
found more frequently in hot countries than in cold.”’ 


Enough has been said to show that marvellous tales were ex- 
pected of travellers in those early days, and some, doubtless, have 
been forced to build up their stories on a very slight foundation, 
while others have evidently recorded their own observations, height- 
ening these, however, by deductions of a most imaginary nature. 


168 CASTOROLOGIA. 


The truth concerning the thin idle wanderers who soon die, is most 
likely that they are cases of sickness or disease, which would also 
account for the poor condition of the fur and might perhaps explain 
the mysterious ‘‘saddle.’’ In the appendix to this volume an ac- 
count is given of the parasite which infests the beaver,—/latypsyllus 
castoris—and as it is generally found that animals seriously affected 
by parasites become thin and sometimes sicken and die, and that 
animals in captivity are more subject to the attacks of vermin than 
when in their native condition, it is possible that Mr. Black’s ‘“‘ idle 
beavers’’ were in too unhealthy a condition to care for work. In 
1887, the keeper explained that when a beaver was seen swimming 
about much in the daytime its dead body was soon looked for, as 
they seldom moved about during the day unless they were sickly. 


The great difference between these attempts of the white man to 
perpetuate the beaver and the method adopted by the Indian is all 
the difference between art and nature. ‘The white man has made 
artificial enclosures for the beaver ; the Indian reserve was a natural 
beaver district, chosen by the animals as a suitable home and 
guarded by the Indian from encroachment. Of the regard which 
beavers had for certain localities Charlevoix says, ‘‘ There are some 
places that the beavers seem to have such an affection for that they 
do not appear able to leave them, although they are always uneasy 
there. On the way from Montreal to Lake Huron by the great river, 
one never fails to find every year at the same place a lodge which 
these animals build or repair every summer ; for the first thing the 
voyageurs do who arrive there earliest, is to break the lodge and the 
dam which provides it with water.’’ 


The Hudson’s Bay Company showed their wisdom by adopting 
the Indian methods of dealing with nature, and in proportion to the 
closeness with which they follow these methods so is the measure of 
their success. ‘They have systematically set aside certain islands 
along the coast of Hudson’s Bay as beaver reserves, those favored 
most by the beaver being chosen. We have seen how every third 
year a family of beaver kittens matures, and the Company considers 
it wise to visit these islands every third year and carefully gather 


CASTOROLOGIA. 169 


a crop of beaver pelts representing the approximate increase based 
on the known habits of the animal. ‘This triennial hunt is con- 
ducted in the most orderly and scientific manner, so as not to dis- 
turb the colonies, and those who have accompanied the parties give 
astonishing accounts of the condition of things witnessed, the beavers 
having almost completely lost their fear of man, and their works 
assume the most elaborate proportions. The time will soon come 
when these reserves will be worked over, and then the limitations 
will bring about the inevitable result, a sudden disappearance of the 
busy hosts. If a single family of beavers, captives on the Isle of 
Bute, felled 187 huge forest trees, besides a great quantity of small 
bushes, within ten years, imagine the destruction which must follow 
the work of a colony of beavers in a well chosen and thoroughly ad- 
vantageous locality. 


For over a thousand years men have discussed and experimented 
upon beaver farming. The accompanying clipping is a very com- 
prehensive and typical proposal : 


A BEAVER RANCHE., 


To the Editor of the Mat: 


S1r,—A good deal of attention has been drawn to the beaver ranche project 
at Sudbury, and the practicability of the enterprise is generally conceded. The 
profits, if successful, will be large ; and the country will be saved the disgrace 
of allowing the most intelligent and domestic of the inferior races to become 
extinct, as will be its certain fate unless protected by mankind. 

The cost of the attempt will be comparatively small, and the result will be 
to develop an industry as extensive and interesting as bee culture has already 
proven. Some legislation will be required to protect the ‘‘infant industry,’’ 
and we trust no undue delay will prevent the success of the enterprise next 
spring. In connection with the subject I might suggest the suitability of the 
Sudbury district for fish culture—abounding, as it does, in small lakes and 
streams, which, if stocked and protected, would satisfy both the sportsman and 
the political economist—an inviting field for health, sport and profit. 

Mours, etc.,, Hac. S: 
Sudbury, Feb. 2, ’87. 


It will be clearly observed that sentiment is at the bottom of this 
scheme, and that no new treatment of the animal is proposed. ‘The 


170 CASTOROLOGIA. 


facts seem utterly overlooked that the beaver is not yet domesticated 
and that innumerable attempts in America and Europe have proved 
failures. ‘To be sure, if the beaver is not too closely hunted it will 
live the longer in any locality, but the question is only one of a few 
years at most, and before this century closes we may find the last 
survivors within a railed enclosure of some zoological garden, at- 
tracting the attention of the populace. 


Unfortunately the beaver does not make a very attractive exhibit, 
for though its works even in a small enclosure are very wonderful, 
its nocturnal habits disappoint the masses who naturally expect to 
find it at least cutting down trees, if not building lodges and dams 
for the public edification. In close captivity the animals soon be- 
come tame, and their nature and condition change as the conse- 
quence of the sudden alterations—loss of exercise, monotony of 
surroundings, and entire novelty in diet. They seldom are seen ex- 
cept towards the dusk of evening, when they come out for food, and 
even the older specimens are comparatively shy. Indian corn is a 
staple food in many zoological gardens, but cabbage, carrots, and in 
fact almost the whole range of culinary vegetables are greedily de- 
voured by the captive beavers. Gradually the lustre of the fur dis- 
appears, the teeth lose their keen edge and the energy flags, till the 
industrious aquatic engineer of popular conception becomes a merely 
animated specimen apparently waiting admission to the ‘‘a/e/zer’’ of 
the anatomist. 


S|) Wa PERSOK ALLOWED | 


vi 


| 


HA , 


‘““NO PERSON ALLOWED WITHIN THE BEAVER ENCLOSURE,” 


ANATOMY—OSTEOLOGY—TAXIDERMY. 


“The great Master (Cuvier) in whose dissect- 
ing rooms, as well as in the public galleries of 
Comparative Anatomy, I was privileged to work, 
held, that ‘species were not permanent :’ and 
taught this great and fruitful truth, not doubt- 
fully or hypothetically, but as a fact established 
inductively on a wide and well-laid basis of 
observation, by which, indeed, among other ac- 
quisitions to science, Comparative Osteology had 
beentcreated iq. pes ey 3 eee ee 
To suppose that co-existing differentiations 
and specialisations, such as Hguus and Rhino- 
ceros, or either of these and Zapirus, which 
have diverged to generic distinctions from an 
antecedent common form, to be transmutable 
one into another, would be as unscientific, not 
to say absurd, as the idea, which has been bol- 
stered up by so many questionable illustrations, 
and foisted upon poor ‘working men,’ of their 
derivation from a gorilla !”’ 


—Richard Owen, F.R.S.—7868. 


“TJ must enter my protest against the singu- 
larly imperfect form in which most of the speci- 
mens in zoological and ornithological museums 
are presented, owing to the low level at which, 
speaking generally, the art of taxidermy re- 
ATIAITISH ty PS a: en en ce 
While in England good birdstufnng is rare and 
very dear, in some continental cities, there are 
to be found taxidermists who will stuff groups 
of birds or animals in such a manner as to give 
the most spirited representation of what they 
were in life.’’ 


—Professor W. H. Flower.—7868. 


CHAPTER: XIV. 


METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION—FORMER RELIANCE ON EXTERNAL CHARAC- 
TERISTICS—THE OFFICES OF COMPARATIVE ANATOMY AND COMPARA- 
TIVE OSTEOLOGY—TAXIDERMY AS A FINE ART—MUSEUMS AND THEIR 
FUNCTIONS. 


The immense value of zoological gardens to the school of Com- 
parative Anatomy is a matter that does not often suggest itself to 
the casual visitor to these most popular places of resort in all well 
appointed educational centres. The ‘‘ Jardin des Plantes,’’ and the 
‘‘Jardin d’Acclimatization,’’ in Paris, are, perhaps, the most scien- 
tific institutions of this kind, and therefore, students of natural his- 
tory are much benefited by visits to these gardens and the organiza- 
tions associated with them. 


The zoological garden should be recognized by all thoughtful 
observers as the introductory department to the comprehensive 
science of Zoology. ‘The school of anatomy relies on a varied sup- 
ply of specimens for profitable work, and this school should leave as 
its contribution to the public, who usually support institutions of this 
kind, a well arranged gallery of osteology and taxidermy. 


From the most superficial reading in our day, one gathers some 
crude ideas of the science of life with all its interdependent relations, 
yet, few can pursue the subject beyond the most primary considera- 
tions, though all intelligent readers wish to understand the great 
principles which connect all living forms. 


Confining ourselves strictly to the highest order of living things 
—the vertebrates—we all recognise the similarity of structure, and 
at the same time the immense differences which afford special fitness 


174 CASTOROLOGIA. 


for certain ends. ‘The wing of the bird and bat, the fin of the whale 
and seal, and the differentiation in the anterior limbs of the mole, 
the sloth, the cat and the horse, are all simply variations of the one 
type—the hand of man. Science concerns itself in arranging in ex- 
act order every phenomenon that comes under the observation of the 
student, and lays before the mind an harmonious plan of all the 
Creator’s work, which must ever claim man’s highest admiration. 


Before the science of Comparative Anatomy was the accepted test 
of affinity, the attempts to arrange the Animal Kingdom into satis- 
factory order varied continually according to the methods applied. 
All tests were more or less superficial, and it is curious to trace the 
shifting of some animals from group to group, as science advanced 
and the principles of classification were more fully comprehended. 
Thus, for example, the wolverine until very recently was classed 
with the Urstde—the bears—because it walked in the same man- 
ner as a bear, that is, it was a plantigrade animal, but to-day the 
wolverine is clearly established as a member of the A/ustelide—the 
weasel family. 


Up to the year 1700, the beaver, so far as is known, had never 
been submitted to the ordinary tests of anatomy or dissected to dis- 
cover its characteristics, but in October of that year M. Sarrasin, 
Médecin du Rot en Canada, addressed a letter to the ‘‘Académie des 
Sciences,’’ giving the results of his efforts in this direction. His 
notes were carefully recorded and very extensive, but their scientific 
value is much impaired by the introduction of statements accepted 
on the authority of trappers, who treated him as they have invari- 
ably treated other enquirers. He stated that ‘‘the largest beavers 
are three to four feet long, by twelve to fifteen inches wide from 
haunch to haunch. ‘They weigh from forty to sixty pounds, and 
live from fifteen to twenty years. ‘The beaver described here was 
caught in a small lake about twelve or fifteen miles from Quebec, 
and weighed fifty pounds.’’ ‘The external features of the beaver are 
among its chief characteristics, beginning with its wonderful teeth 
and ending with its perfectly unique tail. The head is not unlike 
that of the rat, though the nose is flatter and makes the head appear 


CASTOROLOGIA. 175 


shorter and broader. ‘The eyes are dark blue and very small in pro- 
portion to the size of the animal—about half an inch in diameter is 
the maximum measurement—and highly convexed to enable them 
to be used under water; they are, according to M. Sarrasin, fur- 
nished with three separate lids. ‘The ears are also small, quite round 
and concealed in the fur and hair. When the pellage is prime, that 
is in its perfect stage, a shaggy, loose growth of long hair covers the 
entire head and body to the butt or base of the tail, diminishing on 
the lips, eyelids, feet and legs ; the colors and textures of both hair 
and fur or wool have already been discussed. ‘The anterior feet or 
hands, as they have not inappropriately been 
termed, are so dexterous as to favor compar- 
ison with the hands of the monkey ; with 
them the creature builds the dam and the 
lodge, and excavates the burrow, and they -33R\ 
are also used to convey food to the mouth 
in a truly astonishing manner. ‘Though the 
front feet are not usually employed in swim- 
ming there is a very perceptible web joining 
the third and fourth digits, which does not 
seem fitted for any apparent purpose, unless it might be to facilitate 
the handling of mud in the plastering of the lodges or dams. 


BEAVER’S HEAD. 
(STUDY FROM STILL LIFE.) 


The powerful hind feet, with their development of web extending 
to the extreme points, afford the perfect model for aquatic life and 
may be likened to the feet of the turtle. The large heel-pad and 
strong nails enable the creature when on land to stand upright firmly 
on the hind feet, a position very generally assumed when at work. 
On the second toe there is a most remarkable double claw or nail, 
which apparently is only used for combing the fur. Owing to the 
inequality in the proportions of the legs to the feet, and also partly 
to the fact that the toes have a very appreciable inward curve, the 
gait of the beaver is waddling and ungraceful. Its awkwardness 
and clumsiness seem heightened by the difficulty in managing its 
cumbrous tail, which, though sometimes slightly elevated or even 
curved upwards, is generally dragged along the ground and moves 
from side to side at each step. 


176 CASTOROLOGIA. 


Few authorities agree in their descriptions of the beaver’s won- 
derful tail. In Bennett’s ‘‘ The Gardens and Menagerie of the Zoo- 
logical Society Delineated,’’ (1834), an extended article on the bea- 
ver appeared,in the course of which its anatomy was carefully 
treated. ‘The whole of this article was reprinted by Mr. Lewis 
Morgan in his work on ‘‘The American Beaver’’ but the portions 
of greatest value are Mr. Bennett's personal observations, among 
which are the following remarks :— 


‘““Among the numerous, widely dispersed and prolific tribes of 
animals which compose the extremely natural order called by Lin- 
nzus and the writers of his school ‘ Glires,’ there are none perhaps 
which possess so many claims on our attention as the well marked 
and circumscribed little group on the history of which we are about 
to enter. The first and most essential character of the order is ob- 
viously derived from the great development of their incisor teeth ; 
and this peculiarity in structure as might naturally be expected is 
connected with a peculiarity in habits equally remarkable. So strik- 
ing, indeed, is the propensity to gnawing which distinguishes these 
animals that many late zoologists of the French school especially, 
have thrown aside the older designation applied to them by Linnzeus, 
and adopted in its place the expressive name of ‘Rongeurs or 
Rodentia.’ 


‘Of this faculty the beavers appear to exhibit the highest degree 
of development ; their powerful incisor teeth contribute, in an es- 
pecial manner to supply them both with food and shelter. 


‘“The beavers may be regarded as almost typical of the order to 
which they belong. ‘They exhibit, however, in their external form 
several striking modifications peculiar to themselves. Of these the 
most remarkable consists in their tail, which differs in structure from 
that of every other quadruped. This organ which is nearly half as 
long as the body, is broadly dilated, oval, flattened both above and 
below, covered at its thickened base alone with hair similar to that 
which invests the rest of the animal, but overlaid throughout. the 
greater part of this extent with a peculiar incrustation which as- 


CASTOROLOGIA. 177 


sumes the form of regular scales closely resembling those of fishes. 
It is not impossible that the tail may have the power of absorbing 
water, like the skin of frogs, though it must be owned that the scaly 
integument which invests that member has not much of the char- 
acter which generally belongs to absorbing surfaces.”’ 


Mr. Morgan’s description, illustrated by the accompanying photo- 
engraving (direct from nature), is very exact and the subject may be 
concluded by the following extracts from his account: ‘‘In form, 
structure, and uses, the tail is the most conspicuous organ of the 
beaver. It is nearly flat, broad and straight, and covered with 
horny scales of a lustrous black. ‘These scales, which are such in 
appearance only, cover every portion of the surface both above and 
underneath. The tail is attached to a posterior projection of the 
body extending some inches beyond the pelvis, and is furnished with 
strong muscular attachments, by means of which its movements are 
determined. Its principal uses are to elevate or depress the head 
while swimming, to turn the body and vary its direction, and to as- 
sist the animal in diving. It is also used to give a sign of alarm to 
its mates. When alarmed in his pond, particularly at night, he im- 
mediately dives, in doing which the posterior part of his body is 
thrown out of water, and as he descends head foremost, the tail is 
brought down upon the surface of the water with a heavy stroke, 
and deep below it with a plunge. 


‘‘T have heard it distinctly for half a mile, and think it can be 
heard twice or three times that distance under favorable conditions. 


‘““It is capable of a diagonal movement from one side to the other, 
and vice versa, and also of assuming a nearly vertical position. ‘This 
enables them to use it as a scull, which they do when entirely under 
water, and swimming at the most rapid rate. It is most flexible at 
the intersection of the tail proper with the posterior projection of the 
body to which it is attached. The muscles for its down motion are 
several times stronger than for either its upward or lateral move- 
ments. He is able to turn his tail under him and sit upon it, or to use 
it extended behind him as a prop while sitting upon his hind feet. 


N 


178 CASTOROLOGIA. 


‘‘ The posterior extremity of the beaver presents a singular form- 
ation. ‘The body diminishes in size gradually from the hips, and 
terminates in a flat scaly tail, which, measured from the sacrum, is 
about 18” in length; the first 8” being covered with hair like the 
rest of the body. ‘The scaly portion commences abruptly with a 
width of about four inches, and terminates with a rounded extremity. 
The scaly portion is slightly convex above and below, thin at the 
margin, and is covered with a black, tough, scaly epidermis. ‘The 
scales are somewhat irregular in form and size, the most usual form 
being sub-hexagonal, about 32’” in length, and 12’” in width. ‘They 
are arranged transversely in respect to length, in the so-called quin- 
cunx form, and they diminish in size toward the end of the tail ; 
across the middle of the tail the number is 19 or 20 above, and 20 or 
21 on the under surface. A few short, broken hairs pass out be- 
tween the scales. 


‘“The tail is composed largely of a dense fatty tissue, upon this 
lies the derm or skin, its outer surface being serrated, with the points 
of the serratures toward the end of the tail. Over the serratures is 
extended the tough, horny epiderm, which is inflected under the 
serratures, so as to present the imbricate appearance.”’ 


Some idea of the popular conception of the beaver’s tail can be 
gathered from early illustrations, and particular attention is called 
to the accompanying figure, and also to the several reproductions 
which appear in preceding chapters. 


The muscles of the entire order of mammals are studied and de- 
scribed comparatively to the standard of the human frame. Modi- 
fications in connection with certain peculiar functions occur in every 
class, and these are the only parts necessary to consider in a mono- 
graph such as the present. In the order Rodentia, and in the beaver 
pre-eminently we have the development of the ‘‘ masseter muscle’’ 
in its highest degree as it is on this that the creature relies for its 
power to cut and grind hard woody fibres. The extraordinary de- 
velopment of the muscles to move the jaws gives the beaver’s face a 
full, rounded appearance, and not only are the tendons connected 


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CASTOROLOGIA. I8I 


with the use of the cutting teeth, located here, but also those which 
give the lateral or grinding motion necessary for the mastication of 
the tough bark and vegetable substances. ‘The muscles of the whole 
system are powerfully developed and their attachment to the skin is 
so firm that only an experienced hand can remove the skin without 
leaving great layers of muscle adhering to it. The neck, the tail, 
and the limbs are each provided with muscles, strong in proportion 
to the unusual amount of work to be accomplished by these 
members. 


Of the internal organs so many are peculiar to the beaver, that 
naturalists are continually disagreeing as to the strict classification of 
the genus. ‘The cavity of the mouth and the cheeks shows a pecu- 
liar provision for the work the creature is destined to do. ‘The ar- 
rangement is such that when the incisors only are being used, the 
tender mucous membrane of the mouth is completely protected from 
the rough splinters of wood, etc., which might otherwise injure 
these delicate parts. The space between the incisors and the molar 
teeth is very narrow and is covered with a hard, dark-colored skin, 
while the cheeks are furnished with a lining of coarse hairs, suffi- 
ciently long to prevent any particle of the chip passing, which would 
injure the tender palate, tongue or cheeks. 


The stomach of the beaver is similar in most respects to those of 
the other members of the order Rodentia, yet has some minor pecu- 
liarities. ‘The coecum (corresponding to the vermiform appendage 
in man) is, in the beaver, larger than its stomach, for while the lat- 
ter holds but little over three pints, the capacity of the former is 
nearly six pints. 


In the beaver, as in all diving mammals and birds, a provision 
exists for suspended respiration. It is an enlargement of the 
inferior verza cava as it passes through the fissure of the liver, 
and constitutes a sinus in which a considerable quantity of blood 
may be temporarily arrested. This discovery was communicated 
to the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh, by Mr. R. Knox, in the 
year 1823: 


182 CASTOROLOGIA. 


The brain of the beaver contains the insurmountable proof of the 
sagacity of the animal, and shows the low mental power with which 
it is endowed. ‘The lowest in the scale of mammals is the ‘‘ Duck- 
billed beaver,’’ of Australia, (Ornzthorynchus Paradoxus) which was 
described by Mr. William Sharp, in Harper’s Magazine for May, 
1890, as ‘‘an animal that is part fowl and part beaver.’’ Next in 
order are the Marsapials or Pouched Animals, with the Kangaroo as 
the type ; the only example in America being the Opussum (L7del- 
phys Virginiana), of the Southern States. The brains of both these 
classes according to Professor Richard Owen, resemble those of birds 
in the absence of the corpus callossum ; and the brains of the Roden- 
tia are only one step higher. The average weight of brain to body 
in the beaver is stated as 1 to 532; the average for the whole class 
mammialia according to Leuret, is 1 to 186; and in man it is 1 to 36. 


The secretion which is contained in the castoreum glands, is un- 
doubtedly the most peculiar distinction of the gezws Castor. This 
waxy substance, with its queer odor and questionable economy to 
the beaver, is found in two large pockets or sacs situated near the 
butt or base of the tail, enveloped in muscles specially fitted to en- 
able the discharge of any portion at will. ‘They do not appear to be 
connected with any other organ, and are akin to the musk glands of 
the Musquash or the civet glands of the Civet Cat (Viverra Civetta). 


The following note is taken from Dunglison’s Medical Dictionary 
(1874) :—‘‘ Castor or Castoreum ; a peculiar, concrete matter found 
in both sexes of the beaver. Odor—strong, unpleasant, peculiar. 
Taste—bitter, subacid. Color—orange-brown. Uses—anti-spasm- 
odic.’? ‘The variation in the analyses of castoreum, constitutes one 
of the two points of difference between the European and the Cana- 
dian beavers. ‘The other difference is found in a close examination 
of the bones of the skull, which is made the grounds of a prolonged 
controversy with tedious conflicting evidence, as it is on these two 
points alone that the mew species is based. As, however, this 
monograph is a popular rather than a scientific treatment of the 
subject, the details of many purely technical discussions are omitted 
but the results of all important investigations are recorded. 


‘CGHSVd SI AONHUHAAIG OIWIONdS HHL HOIHM NO SHYALVHA AHL ONIMOHS STIONS 


(‘SISNAGVNVO UWOLSVS) (soa douna AOLSVd) 


BS 
hy RA. 


J 


eat rie 


- 


“ ‘ 


CASTOROLOGIA. 185 


In the ‘‘ Mémoires de 1’ Académie Impériale des Sciences de Saint- 
Petersbourg,1855,’’ Dr. J. F. Brandt gave an account of his researches 
among the beavers of Russia, which is reprinted and discussed ad 
item by Dr. W. W. Ely, in the appendix to Lewis Morgan’s ‘‘ The 
American Beaver.’’ Dr. Brandt’s conclusions may be summed up 
in the following words: ‘‘ With respect to the nasal bones, there re- 
mains only their more considerable length in comparison with the 
skull, as a mark of the European beaver.’’ Dr. Ely’s investigations 
and comparisons have resulted in an intermediate position, which is 
thus stated: ‘‘ The extremes of difference, in their aggregate, on 
the one side and the other, are sufficiently striking to justify us in 
regarding them as varieties of one and the same species ; while the 
want of constancy in these peculiarities suggests the inference, that 
these variations are due to long separation of the races, and to ac- 
cidental causes, rather than to original diversity of the stock.”’ 


The skull of the beaver is stronger and more solid than that of 
any other rodent. Many rough prominences mark the strong muscle 
attachments. ‘The lower jaw is very massive and also shows clearly 
the powerful muscular processes. ‘The skeleton has several minor 
generic characteristics, but none are really remarkable if we except, 
perhaps, the vertebrze, which are divided into seven cervical or neck ; 
fourteen dorsal, or back ; five lumbar, or loins ; four sacral (conflu- 
ent) forming the pelvis or haunch ; and twenty-five caudal, or tail ; 
representing in all fifty-five vertebree. In the tail, the bones gradu- 
ally diminish in size and lose the vertebral character, ‘‘in the eighth 
or ninth the spinous processes disappear; in the tenth the spinal 
canal becomes a mere groove; and toward the end of the tail the 
transverse processes lengthen and broaden becoming bifid or double.”’ 


The preservation of the skin and the possibility of investing it 
with an appearance of animation, are matters under the control of 
the taxidermist, whose principal requirement, if these ends are to be 
satisfactorily accomplished, is a knowledge of the poisons which 
may safely be used to prevent the ravages of vermin ; he must also 
possess a knowledge of anatomy and be familiar with the habits of 
animals; and in addition to these, be endowed with the genius of the 


186 CASTOROLOGIA. 


sculptor, to pose the figure and give expression; he must, in fact, 
be chemist, anatomist, naturalist and artist in one. 


A Natural History Museum should never be considered as merely 
a public resort for pleasure ; it has no affinity to the ‘‘ dime museum’’ 
with its monstrosities, and ‘‘ chamber of horrors’’ for popular diver- 
sion, but should aspire to the level and assume the offices of the art 
gallery and the public library ; in a word, it should take the foremost 
place among popular educational institutions. It is a manifest mis- 
apprehension on the part of the officers of a museum to reject with 
indifference a common local specimen, in order to display a parcel of 
trash from a foreign country, which, without history or value, has 
as its only merit that it has been carried a long way. No stronger 
proof of this tendency need be given than the fact that the Museum 
of the Natural History and Geological Survey Department of Can- 
ada has just secured, as a priceless acquisition, a specimen of the re- 
cently exterminated American buffalo (A7son Americanus), which, 
we believe, will constitute the only perfect example in all British 
North America ; while fifteen years ago, specimens would not have 
been thought worth the cost of transport. ‘Though it may become 
the dignity of a government to enrich the national museum with ex- 
changes from foreign countries ; or in the case of university collec- 
tions, it may be necessary to obtain comparative types from abroad ; 
yet, for local societies to attempt more than the careful collection 
and preservation of local specimens, implies losing the substance by 
grasping for the shadow; and though a national museum may 
achieve results beyond the aspirations of a local society, the latter, 
as a specialist, working the details of a section, would become of in- 
dispensable value. ‘The Grosvenor Museum, Chester, under the cura- 
torship of Mr. R. Newstead, F. E.S., furnishes a type of all that a 
local museum might and should be. 


Museums are divided, by Professor Flower, into those intended 
for the instruction and the enlightened amusement of the people, 
and those intended for advanced students; and he then defines 
a well arranged educational museum as “‘a collection of instruc- 
tive labels illustrated by well selected specimens.’’ Simple as this 


“AHAVAE AHL OL GHIIddV AWUACIXVL OLLSILAV 


CASTOROLOGIA. 187 


requirement may seem, it implies both patient work and vast 
resources. To select typical specimens for the group presented here, 
as an illustration of artistic taxidermy applied to the beaver, more 
than a score of specimens were rejected, and a search extending over 
two years accumulated only enough material to set this one group. 
With regard to instructive labels and orderly arrangement, surely it 
will never be permitted in the future to mark a case ‘‘/or large 
specimens generally,’ under which the visitor is called upon to ad- 
mire a sort of ‘‘ happy family ’’ composed of the most heterogenous 
elements. 


Taxidermy, as a fine art, may be said to have originated in our 
own day, though the ‘‘ science of preserving animal tissues’’ dates 
back centuries before the Christian era, when the Egyptians not only 
mummified their kings and princes, but also embalmed both cats 
and ibises with a thoroughness which was intended to withstand the 
ravages of all time. A hundred years ago, taxidermy had scarcely 
progressed beyond the idea of preserving the external tissues, for 
surely the stuffed caricatures yet to be seen*, were never meant to 
convey a likeness of the living animal. 


There are still many opponents to pictorial or artistic taxidermy, 
but arguments must be based on other grounds than those of public 
instruction, for on this point no differences of opinion could exist. 
The difference between the display of artistic taxidermy and that 
which is not artistic, suggests the title of a recent paper by W. Stanley 
Jevons, M.A., LL.D., F.R.S.,—‘‘ The Use and Abuse of Museums.”’ 


The history of the beaver has been told ; but to illustrate it, can 
there be any comparison between the specimens which have fur- 
nished a still-life study to the artist who engraved the frontispiece of 
this volume, and the following sketches taken in public museums in 
Europe? The Rev. H. H. Higgins speaking of the Free Public Mu- 
seum, Liverpool, ‘‘ under the charge of its excellent curator, Mr. T. 
J. Moore, Corr. Mem. Z.S.L.,’’ says, ‘‘In a public museum, ought it 


* In the Natural History Museum of Edinburgh, Scotland, mammals collected by Samuel 
Hearne in America, just a century ago, are still exhibited. 


188 CASTOROLOGIA. 


to be a special aim to illustrate the deawty of natural objects? Such 
a question could hardly arise with reference to order, for order is 
acknowledged to be Nature’s character in chief. Yet, beauty is but 
a special form of order, having this peculiarity, that to minds suit- 
ably cultivated and disposed, it gives immediate pleasure through 
the eye. Nature can be fairly represented only in museums where 
due recognition and representation are conceded to phenomena as- 
sociated with beauty.” 


TAXIDERMIC MONSTROSITIES. 


THH BEAVER IN HERALDRY. 


‘SIC TRANSIT GLORIA MUNDE?* 


[With apologies to Hood.] 


T chanced, one day, by a woodland stream 

‘That threaded its silvered way, a-gleam 

With dancing sunlight’s mirrored beam, 
Among its rocks and sedges ; 

And canopied under a Maple’s shade, 

That sentinelled the forest glade, 

I dreamily watched the ripples that played 
Along the river’s edges. 


Idly dreaming and drinking in 

The breath of the woods—sweet Nectar’s kin— 

Antidote for the fret and din 
That age the city craftsman, 

When out on the river I heard the thrash 

Of falling oars, with their rhythmic plash, 

And the chanson’s gay and joyous dash 
Trolled by some passing raftsman. 


At least I thought ’twas this I heard,— 

But I give you my purest rhyming word, 

Although you may doubt and cry “‘Absurd!”’ 
On a pine-log there, a-straddle, 

A Beaver sat with his household goods, 

Like a chopper returning from the woods, 

When work is done on the high spring-floods, 
Swinging his tail for a paddle ! 


Beating time with his paddle’s sweep, 

He chanted in tones both full and deep 

A pitiful lay, ’twould make you weep 
To hear its doleful measure. 

Seeing me beckoning on the bank, 

He steered his raft through the sedges dank, 

And beaching her there with a sounding clank, 
Demanded to know my pleasure. 


“‘Oh whither away, my friend? ”’ I said ; 

“‘Can you not earn your daily bread, 

Here in your home, that your sails are spread 
In this truly emigrant fashion ?”’ 

He shook the wet from his jerkin buff, 

And wiped away with his furry cuff 

The tears that sprinkled his whiskers rough, 
And thus claimed my compassion : 


* At a session of ‘‘The Society for Historical Studies’’ held in Montreal, April 1st, 
1890, the chairman announced, on the authority of the ‘‘ Herald’s College,” that the Beaver 
and the Maple-wreath had no part in the armorial bearings of Canada, and that Eo Hee 
tion as commonly depicted in the so-called ‘‘ Dominion Coat of Arms’’ was unwarranted. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 


‘“‘T am leaving,” he said, ‘““my native land, 
Though her name be proud and her record grand, 
But ingratitude I never will stand— 

Come death before dishonour ! 
My country has taken the fullest toll, 
And levied her taxes on each round poll 
Of the Beaver clan, till every soul 

Hurls maledictions on her. 


“To die for one’s country is no disgrace :— 
’Mong the names that honour’s bead-roll grace 
A grateful country awards a place 
To the soldier who dies in action, 
Do you wonder I shake my native damp 
From my dripping coat, and quick decamp, 
When I’m known to fame by a postage-stamp, 
A hat, and a party-faction ? 


“When the Heralds quartered a coat-of-arms, 
Of beasts and birds and fishes in swarms, 
And I saw my hairy-coated charms 

Its blazoned crest adorning, 
Contented I was to die; my name, 
I said, shall have undying fame! 
But when the news to my castle came 

My joy was turned to mourning.” 


As he ceased, a patter of drops came down 
And showered us over from toe to crown ; 
It seemed as if her sorrow would drown, 
In tears the Maple was weeping. 
In a flood that drenched her shapely limbs 
The grief-sapped tears that beauty dims, 
Welled from her bird-eye’s round red rims, 
From out her wreathed locks peeping. 


“Tis sad, my brother, past all belief,” 
She said when sorrow had found relief: 
“My life fed yours, we’re one in grief 

For treatment unprecedented. 
I had burned my way to my country’s heart 
I thought, I had taxed the painter’s art 
To limn my charms, and for my part 

With this would fain be contented. 


“‘T bore it when my tinted leaves 
Were bound and pressed in treasured sheaves 
To which the fond collector cleaves 

As to some dear possession. 
And Fame seemed very near to me 
When thou and I were called to be 
Twin-emblems in some jubilee 

Or St. Jean Baptiste procession. 


Igl 


CASTOROLOGIA. 


““My wreathéd chaplet Fame had bound 
A grateful country’s Arms around,— 
I deemed my name would far resound 

By Heralds’ trumpet bruited. 
Alas for fondest dreams of fame !— 
I’d voyage with you and hide our shame— 
To native land renounce all claim— 

Were my ties less deeply rooted. 


“But take, my brother, a pledge with thee ; 
This token of love wear thou for me 
In thy lonely travels by land or sea, 

Nor deem me thus soft-hearted 
In wishing to be remembered still ; 
Though age may wither, and grief me kill, 
May kindly fate keep thee from ill 

When thou and I are parted !”’ 


The Beaver kissed the leaflet that fell 

In his outstretched paws, while the forest dell 

Seemed wrapped about with a mystic spell 
That breathed its sad insistence ;— 

I helped the Beaver his craft to launch ; 

And, straddled aboard its timber staunch— 

In his mouth tight-gripped the Maple-branch— 
He paddled away in the distance. 


—Samuel M. Baylis. 


POSTAGE STAMP ISSUED 1851. 


CHAPTER XV. 


THE RISE OF HERALDRY—TOTEMISM AND HERALDRY—HERALDIC SIGNIFI- 
CANCE OF THE BEAVER—CANADA’S INHERITANCE—OMISSION FROM 
THE PRESENT ARMORIAL BEARINGS—SUGGESTIONS FOR A COMPLETE 
NATIONAL COAT OF ARMS. 


Standing before the monuments of ancient Egypt and contem- 
plating the curious hieroglyphics by which its history was recorded, 
the mind is led to contrast the apparently complicated symbols for- 
merly used to depict ideas, with the code now employed, which is so 
much more simple and more comprehensive. But the Egyptians did 
not rest content with their achievements in “‘ picture-writing ;’’ they 
progressed through the ideographic and phonetic stages, and two 
thousand years ago reached a system almost as complete as our 
own, indeed, with all our matter-of-fact ways we have not yet dis- 
carded the methods that were common in the days of Egypt’s great- 
ness, for even now do we not s7gz and sea/ important documents ? 


The ‘‘seals’’ in use at the present time are the outcome of the 
modern science of Heraldry, and a brief survey of the rise and de- 
velopment of this science will serve to show how very general, even 
now, is the use of the old art of ‘‘ picture-writing.”’ 


When the princes of Europe joined in the Crusades or Holy 
Wars of the twelfth century—the age of purest chivalry—all per- 
sons of dignity or rank possessed elaborate armor and were skilled 
in the uses of the sword and dagger, lance, and battle-ax. In the 
cap-a-pie armor every possibility of identifying the wearer was pre- 
cluded, and a necessity for some means of recognition arose. ‘This 
led to the decoration of the shield, which hitherto had been plain, 
and the movement soon extended to the decoration of the helmet 


194 CASTOROLOGIA. 


with a distinguishing crest, while all the paraphernalia of pageantry, 
especially in tournaments, became a display of personal dignity. 
At first the distinction was for knightly fame or valor, but with the 
tournament, the purity of the decoration or emblazonment was 
abused, and brought about a debased and merely decorative her- 
aldry, and the chivalric ‘‘ bloody dagger’’ with its ‘‘/ mak sicer,”’ 
gave place to flowing plumes and other favors bestowed at the tour- 
nament by fair admirers. Many years later, on the establishment of 
the Herald’s College, a system was promulgated whereby any family 
which could trace its connection with one which formerly bore 
armorial distinction, was permitted to continue the use, as a family 
seal, of the shield, crest, motto and supporters used by its sires. 
A method of recording, blending and even creating ‘‘ coats of arms’’ 
has arisen, which, with the significance attached to each design, 
practically constitutes the hieroglyphics of genealogy. 


The family or tribal ‘‘totem’’ of the North American Indians 
served much the same purpose, though its origin was very differ- 
ent. There is no doubt that totemism is much older than her- 
aldry, and as the Indians employed the totem signs extensively in 
the ‘‘ picture-writings’’ which formerly decorated their robes, they 
had probably more affinity to the old Egyptian hieroglyphics than to 
the modern heraldic emblem. As the origin and importance of In- 
dian totems have been discussed in connection with beaver mythol- 
ogy and folklore, it only remains to show the heraldic significance 
of the beaver. It is interesting to note that the Indian word 
wutohtimoin, of which the Anglicised form is ‘‘totem,’’ signifies the 
thing with which a person or place is associated. 


In Clark’s ‘‘Introduction to Heraldry’’ it is stated that ‘‘the 
Beaver, an amphibious animal, noted for its extraordinary industry 
and sagacity, is naturally very frequently met with in heraldry.”’ 
In Burke’s ‘‘ General Armory,’’ reference is made to the beaver, asa 
crest, granted to Hugh Beaver, Esq. It also is the crest of other 
families, a list of eighteen names is given in Fairbank’s ‘‘ Crests of 
Great Britain and Ireland.’’ Ina window of New Inn Hall, London, 
on a silver shield, a beaver (black) stands erect, devouring a fish. 


CASTOROLOGIA. 195 


Beverley or Before-leag—beaver place—the ancient Anglo-Saxon 
designation of the capital of the East Riding of Yorkshire, was situ- 
ated in a country abounding with forest and rivers in the olden time; 
but the beavers were long ago transferred from their lodges to the 
arms of the borough. ‘The seal of the corporation is: Avgent; 
three waves, Sad/e, on a chief, Sad/e, a beaver statant regardant, 
Argent. ‘The oldest armorial bearings of Beverley emblazon Saint 
John of Beverley, trampling on the ancient emblem of the town 
—the beaver. Biberach or Biberbach, in Germany, also carries the 
beaver in its armorial insignia. 


(1623-1674) (1710-1718) 
SEALS OF THE NEW NETHERLANDS. 


In America the all-absorbing interest of the beaver trade made 
the adoption of the beaver in the heraldic bearings of corporations 
and governments a most appropriate choice. ‘The first public seal 
of the province of New Netherlands is thus described ; A7zgent: 
a beaver, proper; crest: a coronet. This was in use from 1623 to 
1664 and probably even to the time of Governor Colve in 1673-4. 


The warrant for the new seal authorized by King William 
and Queen Mary was brought over from England by Governor 
Sloughter, and bears date 31st May, 1690. It served as the model 
for all the great seals of New York, subsequently received from 


196 CASTOROLOGIA. 


England, and had on one side the effigies of the King and Queen, 
and two Indians kneeling, offering, as presents, the one a roll of 
wampum ; the other, a beaver skin. Artistic license, however, im- 
proved the beaver off the seal, and it never was replaced. 


The commercial value of the beaver passed from New Nether- 
lands to Canada, which was soon acknowledged to be its chosen 
home. Canada lived on the beaver for many years and her very 


COAT OF ARMS OF THE CITY OF MONTREAL, 


existence at times depended on the forthcoming collection of beavers, 
yet when the time came to design a national coat-of-arms, these im- 
portant associations were quite overlooked. ‘The beaver is very 
dear to the heart of Canadians, and almost universal recognition is 
given to the commemoration of its national, its local, and its per- 
sonal qualifications. In the Canadian Numismatic and Antiquarian 
Journal, volume I., 1872, Mr. Alfred Sandham communicated the 


CASTOROLOGIA. 197 


following,* concerning the medal of the Loyal and Patriotic Society 
of Upper Canada, 1812 :— 


‘“One hundred pounds were voted to procure as many medals of 
silver as it could afford, and the following description was sent to 
England: ‘Medal to be 2% inches in diameter’ —JIn a circle 
formed by a wreath of laurel, the words ‘For Merit.’ Legend: 
‘Presented by a grateful country.’ On the obverse, ‘astreight be- 
tween two lakes, on the north side a beaver, (emblem of peaceful 
industry) the ancient armorial bearing of Canada. In the back- 
ground, an English lion slumbering. On the south side of the 
streight, the American Eagle planeing in the air, as if checked 
from seizing the beaver by the presence of the lion.’ Legend, 
/ Upperi€anada: Preserved.” * 


Dr. Robert Bell, of the Geological Survey of Canada, says, ‘‘I 
have occasionally seen the Indian coat-of-arms representing the 
beaver, rudely carved or scribbled on flattened sticks, especially 
near lake Huron, about 30 years ago, when their totems were more 
visible than now. ‘They were principally on ‘head-sticks’ or 
‘death-sticks’ at graves, or by chance on a scrap of wood or birch- 
bark at an old camp.”’ 


According to ‘‘ Dame Heraldry,’’ General Guy Carleton, in re- 
cognition of his successful efforts to withstand the American inva- 
sion of 1760, received the following honors: ‘‘ He became Lord 
Dorchester, and after returning to England, was elected a Knight of 
the Order of the Bath; and the beaver, which abounds in Canada, 
was given him as his supporters, one wearing a mural crown about 
his neck, and the other a naval coronet, in honor of his successful 
endurance of the seige at Quebec, and his victories on Lake 
Champlain.”’ 


J. Redpath Dougall, of the Montreal ‘‘ Witness,’’ in 1890, wrote : 
‘‘T am interesting myself in procuring a simplification of the bear- 


* Copied almost verbatim from the ‘‘ Report of the Loyal and Patriotic Society,’’ published 
in Montreal, 1817. 


198 CASTOROLOGIA. 


ings of Canada or at least of her flag. The beaver is a well estab- 
lished emblem and one equally appropriate to the country in the 
fur trading era, to the lumbering period and to the age of industry ; 
the animal having been everywhere regarded as a model of industry. 
It has also the merit of universally having been in use as an em- 
blem of Canada.”’ 


Sir William Dawson, in a lecture delivered in 1863, on ‘‘ The 
Duties of Educated Young Men in British America,’’ said, ‘‘ Canada 
has two emblems—the beaver and the maple. The beaver in his 
sagacity, his industry, his ingenuity, and his perseverance, is a most 
respectable animal; a much better emblem for our country than the 
rapacious eagle or even the lordly lion; but he is also a type of un- 
varying instincts and Old World traditions. He does not improve, 
and becomes extinct rather than change his ways. Some of our 
artists have the bad taste to represent the beaver as perched on the 
maple bough, a most unpleasant position for the poor animal, and 
suggestive of the thought, that he is in the act of gnawing through 
the trunk of our national tree (the maple). Perhaps some more 
venturous designer may some day reverse the position, and represent 
the maple branch as fashioned into a club, wherewith to knock the 
beaver on the head.”’ 


In answer to a special enquiry made at the office of the Domin- 
ion Archivist, Mr. Douglas Brymner writes: ‘‘I can find no refer- 
ence to the Beaver in the Arms of Canada, nor is it mentioned in the 
descriptions of the Great Seal. The first, so far as I can trace, to 
make use of the Beaver as a crest, was Sir William Alexander, 
raised to the peerage by the title of Viscount Sterling on the 4th 
of September, 1630. ‘The original intention was to grant him the 
right to the Arms of New Scotland (Nova Scotia) quartered with 
his own, whilst the new blazon indicated his new title of Lord of 
Canada, the new titles being only acquired in June, 1633. The crest 
is thus described : ‘ For his crest on a wreath argent, sable - a beaver 
PLOPErs 


As almost every artist’s idea of the way in which the beaver was 


CASTOROLOGIA. 199 


incorporated in the Arms of Canada differed, it was thought that 
the opinion of the Herald’s College on this point would settle it sat- 
isfactorily, but great surprise followed the announcement that neither 
beaver, crown nor wreath pertained to t.e Arms of the Dominion of 
Canada. In earlier times the beaver had been adopted in the de- 
signs for Canadian currency and postage stamps, and the accom- 
panying shield with its very curious heraldic beaver is supposed to 
have been at one time the Arms of Canada. ‘‘ 4rvg¢. quartered by 
cross, Gules, having lion passant, gardt, in centre, Or; First quarter, 
a beaver couchant ; second, saw and hatchet crossed ; third plough ; 


EARLY ARMS OF CANADA (UNAUTHENTICATED). 


fourth, wheatsheaf; all of the third, in a chief of the same, a wreath 
between two leaves and eight stars, Vert.”’ 


In the first number of the ‘‘ Dominion Illustrated,’’ published 
July 7th, 1888, notice was taken of the fact that Canadian Confeder- 
ation had just completed its twenty-first anniversary, and the occa- 
sion was chosen to suggest a design for a permanent coat-of-arms. 
‘‘There is first the shield divided into four quarters, representing 
the four races whose bone and muscle, whose brains and toil, whose 
pluck and money have made this country what it is, and laid the 
foundation of that mightier structure which it is going to become in 


200 CASTOROLOGIA. 


the not distant future. ‘These races are the English, French, Scotch 
and Irish. ach is represented by its token of national flower—the 
rose, lily, thistle and shamrock. ‘The tutelary power of the whole is 
represented by the Imperial Crown, at the summit, and the peculiar 
and special Canadian character is denoted by a beaver over the 
shield and around it a broad wreath of the beautiful Maple leaf. 
The legend underneath is simple while it expresses the fundamental 
principle of our constitution, that we thrive by union, though severed 
by race, creed and tongue. D7verse conjuncte crescimus.”’ 


Many other suggestions have been made, and each has its merits 
and demerits, but surely any design incorporating the beaver will 
have this one improvement. Canada’s present arms, with all their 
complications are very expressive and much admired, therefore, 
suggestions should be in the form of additions not reductions. ‘There 
yet remains the choice of a crest and national motto, besides which, 
supporters to the shield might be added. As the day may not be 
far distant when the voice of the people will demand that these 
omissions should be repaired, it might be timely to offer here a de- 
sign. For a crest, the Imperial Crown, symbol of membership in the 
great Imperial Federation; Motto ‘‘ Ze Canada a’abord,”’ a senti- 
ment worthy of our magnificent future ; supporters, the Canadian 
Beaver resting on Maple boughs, embodying a recognition of our 
traditions and early history. 


May some Hiawatha arise to proclaim our duty and see that in 
the modern hieroglyphics of heraldry is commemorated the departed 
greatness of our national totem—the Beaver. 


‘In those days said Hiawatha, 

‘Lo! how all things fade and perish ! 
From the memory of the old men 
Fade away the great traditions, 

‘Great men die and are forgotten, 
Wise men speak ; their words of wisdom 
Perish in the ears that hear them, 

Do not reach the generations 
That, as yet unborn, are waiting 


SUGGESTION FOR A COMPLETE COAT OF ARMS 


FOR THE DOMINION OF CANADA, 


CASTOROLOGIA. 


In the great mysterious darkness 
Of the speechless days that shall be! 

‘On the grave-posts of our fathers 
Are no signs, no figures painted ; 
Who are in those graves we know not, 
Only know they are our fathers. 

Of what kith they are and kindred, 
From what old, ancestral Totem, 
Be it Eagle, Bear, or Beaver, 

They “escended, this we know not, 
Only know they are our fathers. 

‘Face to face we speak together, 
But we cannot speak when absent, 
Cannot send our voices from us 
To the f:iends that dwell afar off ; 
Cannot send a secret message, 

But th> bearer learns our secret, 
May ~>orvert it, may betray it, 
May reveal it unto others.’ 

Thus said Hiawatha, walking 
In the solitary forest, 

Pondering, musing in the forest, 
On the welfare of his people. 

From his pouch he took his colours, 
Took his paints of different colors, 
On the smooth bark of the birch-tree 
Painted many shapes and figures, 


And each figure had a meaning, 

Each some word or thought suggested. 
Gitche Manito the Mighty, 

He the Master of Life, was painted 

As an egg, with points projecting 

To the four winds of the heavens. 


Mitche Manito the Mighty, 
He the dreadful Spirit of Evil, 
As a serpent was depicted, 

As Kenabeek, the great serpent. 


Life and Death he drew as circles, 


Life was white, but death was darkened. 


203 


204 


CASTOROLOGIA. 


For the earth he drew a straight line, 
For the sky a bow above it ; 
White the space between for day-time ; 
Filled with little stars for night-time ; 
On the left a point for sunrise, 
On the right a point for sunset, 
On the top a point for noon-tide, 
And for rain and cloudy weather 
Waving lines descending from it. 


All these things did Hiawatha 
Show unto his wondering people, 
And interpreted their meaning, 
And he said: ‘ Behold, your grave-posts 
Have no mark, no sign, nor symbol. 
Go and paint them all with figures, 
Each one with its household symbol, 
With its own ancestral Totem ; 
So tha -hose who follow after 
May distinguish them and know them.’ 
And they painted on the grave-posts 
Of the graves yet unforgotten, 
Fach his own ancestral Totem, 
Each the symbol of his household ; 
Figures of the Bear and Reindeer, 
Of the Turtle, Crane, and Beaver, 
Each inverted as a token 
That the owner was departed, 
That the chief who bore the symbol 
Lay beneath in dust and ashes.”’ 


APPENDICES: 


“ 
Ms ‘ 

‘ 

\ 

1 

is @ 
' 
— =. a 7 

. 


APE wD rxA. 


(PHOTO-COPIES FROM ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS.) 


ARREST 


DU CONSEIL DESTAT 
DU ROY, 


Mera kT S:, 
DE UIMPRIMERIE ROYALE, 


M DCCX XI. 


APPENDIX. 


Res he 


DU-CONSEIL DESTAT 
DU ROY, 


Portant Reftabliffement du Privilege Exclufif de la 
Vente du Caftor , en faveur de la Compagnie des 
Indes. 


Du 30. May 172¢. 
Extrait des Regifires du Confeil ad’ Efrat. 


Le ROY s’eftant fait reprefenter !’Arreft de fon 
Confeil, rendu fur la Requefte des Directeurs de 
fa Compagnie des Indes du 16. May 1720. par lequel 
Sa Majefté a ordonné que le Commerce du Caftor 
demeureroit libre, Et a converti le Privilege Exclufif 
de la vente dudit Caftor, accosdé a ladite aS 


ZrO 


APPENDIX. 


2 
par Lettres Patentes du mois d'Aouft 1717. en un 
Droit de neuf fols par livre de Caftor-gras, & de fix 
fols par livre de Caftor fec, qui doit eftre payéa f’En- 
wée du Royaume au profit de ladite Compagnie pen- 
dant toutle temps de fon Privilege; Et Sa Majefté ayant 
reconnu que Ja liberté du Commerce dudit Caftor eft 
également contraire au bien du Commerce general du 
Royaume, aceluy des habitans de la Province du Ca- 
nada & Nouvelle France, & aux interefts dela Compa- 
gnie des Indes; Oury le Rapport du S." Le Pelletier de 
Ja Houffaye Confeiller d’Eftat ordinaire & au Confeil 
de Regence pour les Finances, Controlleur General 
des Finances. SA MAJEsTE FSTANT EN SON CONSEIL, 
de l’avis de Monfieur le Duc d’Orleans Regent, a 
Revoqué & revoque la liberté du Commerce du Caf- 
tor accordé par |’Arreft de fon Confeil du 16. May 
1720. En confequence Ordonne Sa Majefté que la 
Compagnie des Indes jotiira du Privilege Exclufif du 
Commerce du Caftor, conformement aux Lettrés Pa- 
tentes du mois d’Aouft 1717. portant Eftabliffement 
dela Compagnie d’Occident, nommée depuis Com- 
pagnie des Indes, & a YArreft du Confeil de Sa Ma- 
jefté du 18. Juillet 1718. Sa Majefté permet aux Ne- 
gocians & autres particuliers de fon Royaume, quit 
peuvent avoir acheté du Caftor en confequence de 
Ja liberté de ce Commerce, accordée par |’Arreft de 
fon Confcil du 16. May 1720. de le vendre & debi- 
ter aux Chapeliers fabriquans avant le premier De- 
cembre prochain pour tout delay, paflé lequel temps, 
Ordonne Sa Majefte que ceux a qui il en reftera fe- 
ront tenus de le declarer & remettre a 1a Compagnie 
des Jndes dans les 15. premiers jours dudit mois de 
Decembre, laquelle Compagnie fc payera au méme 


APPENDIX. 


prix qu’elle Paura payé ane Canada pendant Ia prefen- 
te année : Deffend Sa Majefté tres expreflement a 
tous fes Sujets de quelque qualité & condition qui’ls 
foient, autres que les Chapeliers fabriquans, de gar- 
der aucun Caftor dans le Royaume aprés ledit jour 
premier Decembre de la prefente année, a peine de 
confifcation du Caftor au profit de 12 Compagnie & 
de Trois mille livres d’amende, dont moitié applica- 
ble a la Compagnie, & [autre moitié au denoncia- 
teur. Fair au Confeil dEftat du Roy, Sa Majefté y 
eftant, tenu a Paris Je trentiéme jour de May mil fept 
cens yipgt-un. Signé PHELYPEAUX, 


Aa ty 1S, 
DE LIMPRIMERIE ROYALE, 


M DCCX Xi. 


oT j : j 
: Ks i i ¥ 
by oe : f ae » 
" , 7 { oF ie yy 
7 : : 
: : 3 a 
' t 
» 
: 1 
. 


A - + 
° 
‘ 
} 
1 
‘ 
. 
; = 
~. 
' 
S 
—_ 
—. 
a 
y 
‘ 
‘ 
» 
- ii 
~ 
: 
’ 
+ 


APPENDIX. 


ARREST 


DU CONSEIL DESTAT 
DU ROY, 


Qui firfeoit ' Execution de celuy di 30. May rat: 
qui rétablit , en faveur de la Compagnie des Indes, 


le Privilege Exclufif de la vente du Caflor. 
Du 20. Juillet 1721. 
Extrais des Regiftres du Confeil d'Eftat. 


| a ROY ayant jugé a propos par les motifs expli- 

quez dans !’Arreft de fon Confeil du 30. May der- 

nier, de reftablir le Privilege Exclufif de la vente du 

Caftor en faveur de la Compagnie des Indes; Et Sa 

Maiefte eflant informée des reprefentations qui ont clté 
A ij 


214 


APPENDIX. 


4 

faites par les Marchands & Negocians de Ia Rochiclle; 
Et par plufieurs des principaux habiians du Canada 
qui fe font trouvez dans ladite Ville pour leurs affaires; 
Lefdites reprefentations tendantes a ce quil pluft a Sa 
Majefté revoquer ledit Arreft comme contraire au Com- 
merce du Royaume en general, & a {'intereft de ladite 
Colonie. Ve par Sa Majefté 1a réponfe faite par fa 
Compagnie des Indes aufdites reprefentations, qui luy 
ont efté communiquées, Enfemble {avis des Deputez 
au Confeil de Commerce; Oiiy Je Rapport du S." Le 
Pelletier de la Houffaye Confeiller d’Eftat ordinaire 
& au Confeil de Regence pour les Finances, Control- 
Jeur General des Finances. LE Roy ESTANT EN 
son CONSEIL, de l’avis de Monfieur le Duc d’Or- 
leans Regent, a Ordonné & ordonne qu'il fera furfs a 
VExecution dudit Arreft du 30. May dernier jufqu’a 
ce que par Sa Majefte il en ait efté autrement ordon- 
né. Fair au Confeil d’Eftat du Roy, Sa Majefté y 
eftant, tenu a Paris le vingtiéme jour de Juillet mul 
fept cens vingt-un. JSigné PHELYPEAUX. 


APPENDIX. 215 


pe ROE St 


DU CONSEIL DESTAT 
Bw» -ReOrYy, 


Concernant le commerce & la qualité du Caftor qui eft 
regu dans les Bureaux de la Compagnie des Indes 
en Canada. 


Du 30. Mars 1726. 
Extrait des Regiflres du Confeil d’Efat. 
tin ROY eftant informé que le Caftor qui eft rec aux 


Bureaux de la Compagnie des Indes en Canada, tant gras, 
demi-gras, que {ec, eft pour la plus grande partie défectueux, 
& néantmoins payé au méme prix du bon; le Caftor qui y eft 
livré pour gras, ayant efté engraiflé ayec des huil.s ou ac fa 


A 


216 


APPENDIX. 


2 
graiffe, au lieu qu’il ne devroit avoir cette qualité de gras, qu’a- 
pres avoir efté porté long-temps par fes Sauvages aufquels il 
fert d’habillement : if en eft de méme du Caftor demi-gras, le- 
quel ne doit eftre regi pour Caftor gras, en execution de l’Ar- 
ref du ri. Juillet 1718. qu’autant quiil {era de bonne qualité: 
la plus grande partie du Caftor fec eft trop chargé de cuir & 
meme de chair, de forte que les Chapeliers qui fe trouvent 
dans la neceffité de prendre ces Caftors tels qu’ils font au Bu- 
reau de ladite Compagnie 4 Paris, fe plaignent quiils y trou- 
vent une perte confiderable , particulierement fur le Caftor cn- 
graiflé, lequel devenant fec en le fabriquant, par la feparation 
qui fe fait de la graifle & huile dont il a efté frotté, d’avec le 
poil, le Chapelier qui l’a payé comme gras, perd non {eule- 
ment la difference du prix du Caftor gras, au fec, mais encore 
le poids de la graiffe qui fort de ce Caftor falfiié, & qu’il luy 
cft impoffible de faire de bons chapeaux avec d’aufli mauyaifes 
matieres, ce qui fera tomber les Manufactures; 4 quoy cftant 
neceflaire de pourvoir. Oiiy le rapport du Sieur Dodun Con- 
feiller ordinaire au Confeil Royal, Controlleur general des Fi- 
nances,SA MAJESTE ESTANT EN SON CONSEIL, aor- 


donné & ordonne ce qui fuit. 
ARTICLE PREMIER: 


Les Robes de Caftor gras, & les Peaux de Caftor fec, de- 
bonne qualité, qui feront apportées aux Bureaux de la Com- 
pagnie des Indes en Canada, continuéront d’y eftre regtiés & 
payées, {avoir Ja livre’ poids de marc de Caftor gras, a raifon 
de Quatre francs, & la livre de Caftor fec, a-raifon de Qua- 
rante fols. 

{T.. 

DEFFEND Sa Majefté ala Compagnie des Indes, de rece- 
voir aucune Robe de Caftor engraiffé ni falfifié, pour Caftor 
gras :luy deffend, a commencer du premier Janvier de f’année 
prochaine, de receyoir les Robes de Caftor demi- gras pour 


Caftor gras. 


APPENDIX. 217 


an) 
; ChE 
VeuT Sa Majefté, que conformément a l’Article III. de 
1’Arreft de fon Confeil du 11. Juillet 1718. il ne foit regu pour 
Caftor fec, qué celuy qui fera d’hyver & de beau poil. 
IV 


PENDANT la prefente année feulement; les Robes de Caf- 
tor demi-gras, de Caftor veule & de Caftor engraifle, fcront 
payées auldits Bureaux, fcavoir le demi-gras de bonne qualité, 
{ur le pied de Soixante fols la livre;le Veule, auffi de bonrie qua- 
lité, a raifon de Cinquante fols la livre; Et le Caftor engraiflé, 
au méme prix que le Caftor fec. 

We 

A commencer de l’année prochaine, les efpeces de Caftor 
mentionnées en |’Article precedent, ne feront plus recacs & 
payées que fur le pied ¢y-aprés, fgavoir les Robes de Caftor 
demi-gras & de Caftor veule, Pune dans {’autre, de bonne qua- 
lité, & raifon de Cinquante fols Ja livre, pourva qu'il n’y ait 
point efté mis de graiffe ni huile pour en augmenter fe poids; 
Et les Robes de Caftor engraiffé , fur le pied de Trente fols 
la livre. 

Wale 

‘PERMET ‘Aladite Compagnie, de recevoir les autres efpeces 
de Caftor rebutées du gras & du fec, dont on pourra faire 
ufage, a condition qu'il en fera compofé des balots feparez, 
& quil n’en fera fait aucun meflange avec le Caftor gras & 
fec; lefquels Caftors de rebut feront payez par les Commis de 
la Compagnie, aux prix qui feront reglez par l’Intendant du 
Canada, fur lavis des Experts qu’il aura nommez pour en faire 
l’examen. 

VeuT: 
Toutes les efpeces de Caftor continuéront d’cftre payées 
4 ceux qui les livreront aux Bureaux de ladite Compagnie, 
en Lettres de change fuivant Pufage , qui feront tirces par fon 


Agent 4 Quebec, fur le Caiffier de ladite Compagnie a Paris, 


218 APPENDIX. 


payables, fcavoir pour. fa ee des Caftors gras, demi-gras 
& veule, moitié en Janvier & moitié en Fevrier de lannée 
fuivante ; & pour celle du Caftor fec & des autres efpeces de 
Caftor rebutées du gras & du fec, moitié en Mars & I’autre 
moitié en Avril auffi de Pannée fuivante; lefquelles Lettres 
continuéront d’eftre acceptées a leur prefentation, & regulie- 
rement payées a Jeur écheance. 
VITt. 

VeuT Sa Majefté, que les Arrefts de fon Confeil du rr. 
Juillet 1718. & 4. Juin 1719. concernant le commerce du 
Caflor , foient executez en ce qu'il n’y eft deroge par le prefent: 
Et enjoint au Sieur Intendant de la nouvelle France, de tenir 
1a main a l’execution du prefent Arreft, qui fera enregiftré au 
Confeil fuperieur de Quebec, Ii, publi¢ & affiché par tout 
ou befoin fera. Farr au Confeil d’Eftat du Roy, Sa Majefté 
y eftant , tenu a Verfailles le trenti¢me jour de Mars mil fept 
cens vingt-fix. Sigué PHELYPEAUX., 


Ae A vedas) 
DE L:IMPRIMERIE ROYALE. 


M. DCCX XVI. 


APPENDIX B. 


(EXTRACT FROM) 


A 


JOURNEY 


FROM 


REN Ce he Oi WA i S.S ob © Rab 


INTL OD SONGS Ble 


TO 


THE NORTHERN OCEAN. 


UNDERTAKEN 


BY ORDER OF THE HUDSON S BAY COMPANY. 


FOR THE DISCOVERY OF 


COPPER MINES, A NORTH WEST PASSAGE, &c. 


ini the Years '1769,.1770; 1771, & 1772. 


By SAMUEL HEARNE. 


SAMUEL HEARNE’S ACCOUNT OF THE BEAVER. 


The beaver being so plentiful, the attention of my companions 
was chiefly engaged on them, as they not only furnished delicious 
food, but their skins proved a valuable acquisition, being a princi- 
pal article of trade, as well as a serviceable one for clothing, &c. 


The situation of the beaver-houses is various. Where the beavers 
are numerous they are found to inhabit lakes, ponds, and rivers, 
as well as those narrow creeks which connect the numerous lakes 
with which this country abounds ; but the two latter are generally 
chosen by them when the depth of water and other circumstances 
are suitable, as they have then the advantage of a current to con- 
vey wood and other necessaries to their habitations, and because, in 
general, they are more difficult to be taken, than those that are built 
in standing water. 


There is no one particular part of a lake, pond, river, or creek, 
of which the beavers make choice for building their houses on, in 
preference to another; for they sometimes build on points, some- 
times in the hollow of a bay, and often on small islands; they 
always chuse, however, those parts that have such a depth of 
water as will resist the frost in Winter, and prevent it from freezing 
to the bottom. 


The beaver that build their houses in small rivers or creeks, in 
which the water is liable to be drained off when the back supplies 
are dried up by the frost, are wonderfully taught by instinct to pro- 
vide against that evil, by making a dam quite across the river, at a 
convenient distance from their houses. This I look upon as the 
most curious piece of workmanship that is performed by the beaver ; 
not so much for the neatness of the work, as for its strength and 


Dae APPENDIX. 


real service; and at the same time it discovers such a degree of 
sagacity and foresight in the animal, of approaching evils, as is 
little inferior to that of the human species, and is certainly peculiar 
to those animals. 


The beaver-dams differ in shape according to the nature of the 
place in which they are built. If the water in the river or creek 
have but little motion, the dam is almost straight ; but when the 
current is more rapid, it is always made with a considerable curve, 
convex towards the stream. ‘The materials made use of in those 
dams are drift-wood, green willows, birch and poplars, if they can 
be got ; also mud and stones, intermixed in such a manner as must 
evidently contribute to the strength of the dam ; but in these dams 
there is no other order or method observed, except that of the work 
being carried on with a regular sweep, and all the parts being made 
of equal strength. 


In places which have been long frequented by beaver undis- 
turbed, their dams, by frequent repairing, become a solid bank, cap- 
able of resisting a great force both of water and ice ; and as the wil- 
low, poplar, and birch generally take root and shoot up, they by 
degrees form a kind of regular-planted hedge, which I have seen in 
some places so tall, that birds have built their nests among the 
branches. 


Though the beaver which build their houses in lakes and other 
standing waters, may enjoy a sufficient quantity of their favourite 
element without the assistance of a dam, the trouble of getting wood 
and other necessaries to their habitations without the help of a cur- 
rent, must in some measure counterbalance the other advantages 
which are reaped from such a situation; for it must be observed, 
that the beaver which build in rivers and creeks, always cut their 
wood above their houses, so that the current, with little trouble, 
conveys it to the place required. 


The beaver-houses are built of the same materials as their 
dams, and are always proportioned in size to the number of inhabit- 


APPENDIX. 223 


ants, which seldom exceed four old, and six or eight young ones ; 
though, by chance, I have seen above double that number. 


These houses, though not altogether unworthy of admiration, 
fall very short of the general description given of them ; for instead 
of order or regulation being observed in rearing them, they are of a 
much ruder structure than their dams. 


Those who have undertaken to describe the inside of beaver- 
houses, as having several apartments appropriated to various uses ; 
such as eating, sleeping, store-houses for provisions, and one for 
their natural occasions, &c., must have been very little acquainted 
with the subject; or, which is still worse, guilty of attempting to 
impose on the credulous, by representing the greatest falsehoods as 
real facts. Many years constant residence among the Indians, dur- 
ing which I had an opportunity of seeing several hundreds of those 
houses, has enabled me to affirm that every thing of the kind is 
entirely void of truth; for, notwithstanding the sagacity of those 
animals, it has never been observed that they aim at any other con- 
veniences in their houses, than to have a dry place to lie on; and 
there they usually eat their victuals, which they occasionally take 
out of the water. 


It frequently happens, that some of the large houses are found to 
have one or more partitions, if they deserve that appellation ; but 
that is no more than a part of the main building, left by the sagacity 
of the beaver to support the roof. On such occasions it is common 
for those different apartments, as some are pleased to call them, 
to have no communication with each other but by water ; so that in 
fact they may be called double or treble houses, rather than different 
apartments of the same house. I have seen a large beaver-house 
built in a small island, that had near a dozen apartments under one 
roof: and, two or three of these only excepted, none of them had 
any communication with each other but by water. As there were 
beaver enough to inhabit each apartment, it is more than probable 
that each family knew its own, and always entered at their own 
door, without having any further connection with their neighbours 


QO 


~ 


224 APPENDIX. 


than a friendly intercourse ; and to join their united labours in erect- 
ing their separate habitations, and building their dams where re- 
quired. It is difficult to say whether their interest on other occas- 
ions was anyways reciprocal. ‘The Indians of my party killed twelve 
old beaver, and twenty-five young and half-grown ones out of the 
house above mentioned ; and on examination found that several had 
escaped their vigilance, and could not be taken but at the expence 
of more trouble that would be sufficient to take double the number 
in a less difficult situation.* 


Travellers who assert that the beaver have two doors to 
their houses, one on the land-side, and the other next the water, 
seem to be less acquainted with those animals than others who 
assign them an elegant suite of apartments. Such a proceeding 
would be quite contrary to their manner of life, and at the 
same time would render their houses of no use, either to protect 
them from their enemies, or guard them against the extreme: 
cold in Winter. 


The quiquehatches, or wolvereens, are great enemies to the bea- 
ver ; and if there were a passage into their houses on the land-side, 
would not leave one of them alive wherever they came. 


I cannot refrain from smiling, when I read the accounts of differ- 
ent Authors who have written on the ceconomy of those animals, as 
there seems to be a contest between them, who shall most exceed in 
fiction. But the Compiler of the Wonders of Nature and Art seems, 
in my opinion, to have succeeded best in this respect ; as he has not 
only collected all the fictions into which other writers on the sub- 
ject have run, but has so greatly improved on them, that little re- 
mains to be added to his account of the beaver, beside a vocabulary 
of their language, a code of their laws, and a sketch of their religion, 
to make it the most complete natural history of that animal which 
can possibly be offered to the public. 


* The difficulty here alluded to, was the numberless vaults the beaver had in the sides of 
the pond, and the immense thickness of the house in some parts, 


APPENDIX. 225 


There cannot be a greater imposition, or indeed a grosser insult, 
on common understanding, than the wish to make us believe the 
stories of some of the works ascribed to the beaver ; and though it 
is not to be supposed that the compiler of a general work can be in- 
timately acquainted with every subject of which it may be necessary 
to treat, yet a very moderate share of understanding is surely suffi- 
cient to guard him against giving credit to such marvellous tales, 
however smoothly they may be told, or however boldly they may be 
asserted, by the romancing traveller. 


To deny that the beaver is possessed of a very considerable de- 
gree of sagacity, would be as absurd in me, as it is in those Authors 
who think they cannot allow them too much. I shall willingly 
grant them their full share ; but it is impossible for any one to con- 
ceive how, or by what means, a beaver, whose full height when 
standing erect does not exceed two feet and a half, or three feet at 
most, and whose fore-paws are not much larger than a half-crown 
piece, can ‘‘ drive stakes as thick as a man’s leg into the ground 
‘“‘three or four feet deep.’’ Their ‘‘wattling those stakes with 
‘twigs,’ is equally absurd; and their ‘‘ plastering the inside of 
‘their houses with a composition of mud and straw, and swimming 
‘‘Wwith mud and stones on their tails,’’ are still more incredible. 
The form and size of the animal, notwithstanding all its sagacity, will 
not admit of its performing such feats ; and it would be as impossible 
for a beaver to use its tail as a trowel, except on the surface of the 
ground on which it walks, as it would have been for Sir James 
Thornhill to have painted the dome of St. Paul’s cathedral without 
the assistance of scaffolding. ‘The joints of their tail will not admit 
of their turning it over their backs on any occasion whatever, as it 
has a natural inclination to bend downwards ; and it is not without 
some considerable exertion that they can keep it from trailing on the 
ground. ‘This being the case, they cannot sit erect like a squirrel, 
which is their common posture: particularly when eating, or when 
they are cleaning themselves, as a cat or squirrel does, without hav- 
ing their tails bent forward between their legs ; and which may not 
improperly be called their trencher: 


226 APPENDIX. 


So far are the beaver from driving stakes into the ground when 
building their houses, that they lay most of the wood crosswise, and 
nearly horizontal, and without any other order than that of leaving 
a hollow or cavity in the middle; when any unnecessary branches 
project inward, they cut them off with their teeth, and throw them 
in among the rest, to prevent the mud from falling through the 
roof. It is a mistaken notion, that the wood-work is first completed 
and then plaistered ; for the whole of their houses, as well as their 
dams, are from the foundation one mass of wood and mud, mixed 
with stones, if they can be procured. ‘The mud is always taken from 
the edge of the bank, or the bottom of the creek or pond, near the 
door of the house ; and though their fore-paws are so small, yet it is 
held so close up between them, under their throat, that they carry both 
mud and stones ; while they always drag the wood with their teeth. 


All their work is executed in the night ; and they are so expedi- 
tious in completing it, that in the course of one night I have known 
them to have collected as much mud at their houses as to have 
amounted to some thousands of their little handfuls ; and when any 
mixture of grass or straw has appeared in it, it has been, most as- 
suredly, mere chance, owing to the nature of the ground from which 
they had taken it. As to their designedly making a composition 
for that purpose, it is entirely void of truth. 


It is a great piece of policy in those animals, to cover, or plaister, 
as it is usually called, the outside of their houses every fall with 
fresh mud, and as late as possible in the Autumn, even when the 
frost becomes pretty severe ; as by this means it soon freezes as hard 
as a stone, and prevents their common enemy, the quiquehatch, from 
disturbing them during the Winter. And as they are frequently 
seen to walk over their work, and sometimes to give a flap with their 
tail, particularly when plunging into the water, this has, without 
doubt, given rise to the vulgar opinion that they use their tails as a 
trowel, with which they plaister their houses ; whereas that flapping 
of the tail is no more than a custom, which they always preserve, 
even when they become tame and domestic, and more particularly 
so when they are startled. 


APPENDIX. 227 


Their food chiefly consists of a large root, something resembling 
a cabbage stalk, which grows at the bottom of the lakes and rivers. 
They eat also the bark of trees, particularly that of the poplar, birch, 
aud willow ; but the ice preventing them from getting to the land 
in Winter, they have not any barks to feed upon during that season, 
except that of such sticks as they cut down in Summer, and throw 
into the water opposite the doors of their houses, and as they gener- 
ally eat a great deal, the roots above mentioned constitute a chief 
part of their food during the Winter. In summer they vary their 
diet, by eating various kinds of herbage, and such berries as grow 
near their haunts during that season. 


When the ice breaks up in the spring, the beaver always leave 
their houses, and rove about the whole Summer, probably in search 
of a more commodious situation ; but in case of not succeeding in 
their endeavours, they return again to their old habitations a little 
before the fall of the leaf, and lay in their Winter stock of woods. 
They seldom begin to repair the houses till the frost commences, and 
never finish the outer coat till the cold is pretty severe, as hath been 
already mentioned. 


When they shift their habitations, or when the increase of their 
number renders it necessary to make some addition to their houses, 
or to erect new ones, they begin felling the wood for these purposes 
early in the Summer, but seldom begin to build till the middle or 
latter end of August, and never complete their houses till the cold 
weather be set in. 


Notwithstanding what has been so repeatedly reported of those 
animals assembling in great bodies, and jointly erecting large towns, 
cities, and commonwealths, as they have sometimes been called, I am 
confident, from many circumstances, that even where the greatest 
numbers of beaver are situated in the neighbourhood of each other, 
their labours are not carried on jointly in the erection of their differ- 
ent habitations, nor have they any reciprocal interest, except it be 
such as live immediately under the same roof; and then it extends 
no farther than to build or keep a dam which is common to several 


228 APPENDIX. 


houses. In such cases it is natural to think that every one who re- 
ceives benefit from such dams, should assist in erecting it, being sen- 
sible of its utility to all. 


Persons who attempt to take beaver in Winter should be 
thoroughly acquainted with their manner of life, otherwise they will 
have endless trouble to effect their purpose, and probably without 
success in the end ; because they have always a number of holes in 
the banks, which serve them as places of retreat when any injury is 
offered to their houses ; and in general it is in those holes that they 
are taken. 


When the beaver which are situated in a small river or creek are 
to be taken, the Indians sometimes find it necessary to stake the 
river across, to prevent them from passing ; after which, they en- 
deavour to find out all their holes or places of retreat in the banks. 
This requires much practice and experience to accomplish, and is 
performed in the following manner: Every man being furnished 
with an ice-chisel, lashes it to the end of 1 small staff about four or 
five feet long ; he then walks along the edge of the banks, and keeps 
knocking his chisel against the ice. ‘Those who are well acquainted 
with that kind of work well know by the sound of the ice when they 
are opposite to any of the beaver’ holes or vaults. As soon as they 
suspect any, they cut a hole through the ice big enough to admit an 
old beaver ; and in this manner proceed till they have found out all 
their places of retreat, or at least as many of them as possible. 
While the principal men are thus employed, some of the understrap- 
pers, and the women, are busy in breaking open the house, which at 
times is no easy task ; for I have frequently known these houses to 
be five and six feet thick ; and one in particular, was more than 
eight feet thick on the crown. When the beaver find that their 
habitations are invaded, they fly to their holes in the banks for 
shelter ; and on being perceived by the Indians, which is easily done, 
by attending to the motion of the water, they block up the entrance 
with stakes of wood, and then haul the beaver out of its hole, either 
by hand, if they can reach it, or with a large hook made for that 
purpose, which is fastened to the end of a long stick. 


APPENDIX. 229 


In this kind of hunting, every man has the sole right to all the 
beaver caught by him in the holes or vaults; and as this is a con- 
stant rule, each person takes care to mark such as he discovers, by 
sticking up the branch of a tree, or some other distinguishing post, 
by which he may know them. All that are caught in the house 
also are the property of the person who finds it. 


The same regulations are observed, and the same process used in 
taking beaver that are found in lakes and other standing waters, ex- 
cept it be that of staking the lake across, which would be both un- 
necessary and impossible. Taking beaver houses in these situations 
is generally attended with less trouble and more success than in the 
former. 


The beaver is an animal which cannot keep under water long 
at a time ; so that when their houses are broken open, and all their 
places of retreat discovered, they have but one choice left, as it may 
be called, either to be taken in their houses or their vaults: in gen- 
eral they prefer the latter ; for where there is one beaver caught in 
the house, many thousands are taken in their vaults in the banks. 
Sometimes they are caught in nets, and in the Summer very fre- 
quently in traps. In winter they are very fat and delicious; but 
the trouble of rearing their young, the thinness of their hair, and 
‘their constantly roving from place to place, with the trouble they 
have in providing against the approach of Winter, generally keep 
them very poor during the summer season, at which time their flesh 
is but indifferent eating, and their skins of so little value, that the 
Indians generally singe them, even to the amount of many thousands 
in one Summer. ‘They have from two to five young, at a time. Mr. 
Dobbs, in his Account of Hudson’s Bay, enumerates no less than 
eight different kinds of beaver; but it must be understood that they 
are all of one kind and species ; his distinctions arise wholly from 
the different seasons of the year in which they are killed, and the 
different uses to which their skins are applied which is the sole 
reason that they vary so much in value. 


Joseph Lefranc, or Mr. Dobbs for him, says, that a good hunter 


230 APPENDIX. 


can kill six hundred beaver in one season, and can only carry one 
hundred to market. If that was really the case in Lefranc’s time, 
the canoes must have been much smaller than they are at present ; 
for it is well known that the generality of the canoes which have 
visited the Company’s Factories for the last forty or fifty years, are 
capable of carrying three hundred beaver-skins with great ease, ex- 
clusive of the Indians luggage, provisions, &c. 


If ever a particular Indian killed six hundred beaver in one 
Winter, (which is rather to be doubted, ) it is more than probable 
that many in his company did not kill twenty, and perhaps some 
none at all, so that by distributing them among those who had bad 
success, and others who had no abilities for that kind of hunting, 
there would be no necessity of leaving them to rot, or for singing 
them in the fire, as related by the Author. During my residence 
among the Indians I have known some individuals kill more beaver, 
and other heavy furs, in the course of a Winter, than their wives 
could manage ; but the overplus was never wantonly destroyed, but 
always given to their relations, or to those who had been less suc- 
cessful ; so that the whole of the great hunters labours were always 
brought to the Factory. It is indeed too frequently a custom among 
the Southern Indians to singe many otters, as well as beaver ; but 
this is seldom done except in Summer, when their skins are of so 
little value as to be scarcely worth the duty ; on which account it 
has always been thought impolitic to encourage the natives to kill 
such valuable animals at a time when their skins are not in season. 


The white beaver, mentioned by Lefranc, are so rare, that instead 
of being ‘‘ blown upon by the Company’s Factors,’’ as he asserts, 
I rather doubt whether one-tenth of them ever saw one during the 
time of their residence in this country. In the course of twenty 
years experience in the countries about Hudson’s Bay, though I 
travelled six hundred miles to the West of the sea-coast, I never saw 
but one white beaver-skin, and it had many reddish and brown hairs 
along the ridge of the back, and the sides and belly were of a glossy 
silvery white. It was deemed by the Indians a great curiosity ; and 
I offered three times the usual price for a few of them, if they could 


APPENDIX. 231 


be got; but in the course of ten years that I remained there after- 
wards, I could not procure another ; which is a convincing proof 
there is no such thing as a breed of that kind, and that a variation 
from the usual color is very rare. 


Black beaver, and that of a beautiful gloss, are not uncommon : 
perhaps they are more plentiful at Churchill than at any other Fac- 
tory in the Bay ; but itis rare to get more than twelve or fifteen of 
their skins in the course of one year’s trade. 


Lefranc, as an Indian, must have known better than to have in- 
formed Mr. Dobbs that the beaver have from ten to fifteen young at 
a time; or if he did, he must have deceived him wilfully ; for the 
Indians, by killing them in all stages of gestation, have abundant 
opportunities for ascertaining the usual number of their offspring. 
I have seen some hundreds of them killed at the seasons favourable 
for those observations, and never could discover more than six young 
in one female, and that only in two instances ; for the usual number, 
as I have before observed, is from two to five. 


Besides this unerring method of ascertaining the real number of 
young which any animal has at a time, there is another rule to go 
by, with respect to the beaver, which experience has proved to the 
Indians never to vary or deceive them, that is by dissection ; for on 
examining the womb of a beaver, even at a time when not with 
young, there is always found a hardish round knob for every young 
she had at the last litter. This is a circumstance I have been par- 
ticularly careful to examine, and can affirm it to be true, from real 
experience. 


Most of the accounts, nay I may say all the accounts now extant, 
respecting the beaver, are taken from the authority of the French 
who have resided in Canada; but those accounts differ so much 
from the real state and ceconomy of all the beaver to the North of 
that place, as to leave great room to suspect the truth of them alto- 
gether. In the first place, the assertion that they have two doors to 
their houses, one on the land side and the other next the water, is, 


232 APPENDIX. 


as I have before observed, quite contrary to fact and common sense, 
as it would render their houses of no use to them, either as places of 
shelter from the inclemency of the extreme cold in Winter, or as a 
retreat from their common enemy the quiquehatch. ‘The only thing 
that could have made M. Du Pratz, and other French writers, con- 
jecture that such a thing did exist, must have been from having 
seen some old beaver houses which had been taken by the Indians ; 
for they are always obliged to make a hole in one side of the house 
before they can drive them out; and it is more than probable that 
in so mild a climate as Canada, the Indians do generally make those 
holes on the land-side*, which without doubt gave rise to the 
suggestion. 


In respect to the beaver dunging in their houses, as some persons 
assert, it is quite wrong as they always plunge into the water to do 
it. I am the better enabled to make this assertion, from having 
kept several of them till they became so domesticated as to answer 
to their name, and follow those to whom they were a<:ustomed, in 
the same manner as a dog would do; and they were as much 
pleased at being fondled, as any animal I ever saw. I had a house 
built for them, and a small piece of water before the door, into which 
they always plunged when they wanted to ease nature ; and their 
dung being of a light substance, immediately rises and floats on the 
surface, then separates and subsides to the bottom. When the Winter 
sets in so as to freeze the water solid, they still continue their cus- 
tom of coming out of their house, and dunging and making water 
on the ice ; and when the weather was so cold that I was obliged to 
take them into my house, they always went into a large tub of water 
which I set for that purpose: so that they made not the least dirt, 
though they were kept in my own sitting room, where they were the 
constant companions of the Indian women and children, and were so 
fond of their company, that when the Indians were absent for any 
considerable time, the beaver discovered great signs of uneasiness, 


* The Northern Indians think that the sagacity of the beaver directs them to make that 
part of their house which fronts the North much thicker than any other part, with a view of 
defending themselves from the cold winds which generally blow from that quarter during 
the Winter; and for this reason the Northern Indians generally break open that side of the 
beaver-houses which exactly front the South. 


APPENDIX. 233 


and on their return shewed equal marks of pleasure by fondling on 
them, crawling into their laps, laying on their backs, sitting erect 
like a squirrel, and behaving to them like children who see their 
parents but seldom. In general during the Winter they lived on 
the same food as the women did, and were remarkably fond of rice 
and plum-pudding: they would eat partridges and fresh venison 
very freely, but I never tried them with fish, though I have heard 
they will at times prey on them. In fact, there are few of the gran- 
ivorous animals that may not be brought to be carnivorous. It is 
well known that our domestic poultry will eat animal food: thou- 
sands of geese that come to London market are fattened on tallow- 
craps ; and our horses in Hudson’s Bay would not only eat all kinds 
of animal food, but also drink freely of the wash or pot-liquor, in- 
tended for the hogs. And we are assured by the most authentic 
Authors, that in Iceland, not only black cattle, but also the sheep, 
are almost entirely fed on fish and fish-bones during the Winter 
season. Even in the Isles of Orkney, and that in Summer, the sheep 
attend the ebbing of the tide as regular as the Esquimaux curlew, 
and go down to the shore which the tide has left, to feed on the sea- 
weed. This, however, is through necessity, for even the famous 
Island of Pomona* will not afford them an existence above high 
water-mark. 


With respect to the inferior, or slave-beaver, of which some 
Authors speak, it is, in my opinion, very difficult for those who are 
best acquainted with the ceconomy of this animal to determine 
whether there are any that deserve that appellation or not. It some- 
times happens, that a beaver is caught, which has but a very indif- 
ferent coat, and which has broad patches on the back, and shoulders 
almost wholly without hair. ‘This is the only foundation for assert- 
ing that there is an inferior, or slave-beaver, among them. And 
when one of the above description is taken, it is perhaps too hastily 
inferred that the hair is worn off from those parts by carrying heavy 
loads : whereas it is most probable that it is caused by a disorder 
that attacks them somewhat similar to the mange; for were that 


* This being the largest of the Orkney Islands, is called by the inhabitants the Main 
Land. 


234 APPENDIX. 


falling off of the hair occasioned by performing extra labour, it is 
natural to think that instances of it would be more frequent than 
they are ; as it is rare to see one of them in the course of seven or ten 
years. I have seen a whole house of those animals that had nothing 
on the surface of their bodies but the fine soft down ; all the long 
hairs having molted off. ‘This and every other deviation from the 
general run is undoubtedly owing to some particular disorder. 


APPENDIEX—C. 


PEALYeoYULUS CASTORIS. 


Bye Vie REE Ve 


‘“A glance at the illustrations which I have prepared will show 
the prevailing characteristics of this interesting creature, its general 
ovoid and flattened form, and more particularly the flattened semi- 
circular head. Dorsally, we notice the rather prominent occiput 
fringed behind with short and broad depressed spines or teeth which 
form a sort of comb, the prothorax trapezoidal and but very slightly 
curved, with side margins strongly grooved. ‘There is a very dis- 
tinct scutellum, and the two elytra are rounded at the tip and with- 
out venation. Hind wings and eyes are both wanting. The abdo- 
men shows five segments, each with a row of depressed bristles.”’ 


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SVoLeE MATIC REEATIONS OK PLATYPSYLLUS, AS 
DETERMINED BY THE, VAR VA: 


By Cs Wi RoE. 


There is always a great deal of interest attaching to organisms 
which are unique in character and which systematists find difficulty 
in placing in any of their schemes of classification. A number of 
instances will occur to every working naturalist, and I need only 
refer to Limulus, and the extensive literature devoted during the 
past decade to the discussion of its true position, as a marked and 
well-known illustration. In Hexapods the common earwig and flea 
are familiar illustrations. These osculant or aberrant forms occur 
most among parasitic groups, as the Stylopidee, Hippoboscide, 
Pulicidze, Mallophaga, etc. Probably no Hexapod, however, has 
more interested entomologists than Platypsyllus castoris Ritsema, a 
parasite of the beaver. 


During a stay at West Point, Nebr., in October, 1886, I learned 
from one of my agents, Mr. Lawrence Bruner, that there was a 
beaver in a creek not far from that point, and I at once made 
arrangements for him to trap the beaver, and to look particularly for 
living specimens of Platypsyllus on the skin, and especially the 
earlier stages. He succeeded in capturing the beaver and sent me 
some fifteen specimens of the larva and also some imagos, but 
neither eggs nor pupze were found. A glance at the larva satisfied 
me at once of its coleopterous nature ; but as we have, waiting to be 
worked up and published, an embarras de richesses entomologiques in 
the collections of the National Museum, and as circumstances 
largely decide the precedence, I should probably not have called 
the attention to this larva for some time, had it not been that at the 
last monthly meeting of the Entomological Society of Washington, 
Dr. Horn, who was present, announced the finding, the present 
spring, by one of his correspondents, of this very larva, and exhib- 


238 APPENDIX. 


ited a specimen. Some points about it, and especially the position 
of the spiracles, being yet rather obscure in his mind, he requested 
me to examine my material, which I have thus been led to do. 


As confirmatory of the affinities of Platypsyllus, as here proved, 
it may be mentioned that Leptinus testaceus Mull., the only species 
of its genus, is known to be parasitic on mice, as it has been found 
upon them in Philadelphia by Dr. John A. Ryder, and I have taken 
it in the nests of a common field mouse near Washington ; but still 
more interesting is the fact that Lepfinzllus validus Horn (also the 
only species of its genus) is an associate parasite of Platypsyllus on 
the beaver, a number of both having been taken by one of my 
agents, Mr. A. Koebele, in San Francisco, from beaver skins brought 
from Alaska. 


Platypsyllus, therefore, is a good Coleopteron, and in all the 
characters in which it so strongly approaches the Mallophaga it 
offers merely an illustration of modification due to food habit and 
environment. In this particular it is, however, of very great interest 
as one of the most striking illustrations we have of variation in 
similar lines through the influence of purely external or dynamical 
conditions, and where genetic connection and heredity play no part 
whatever. It is at the same time interesting because of its synthetic 
characteristics, being evidently an ancient type from which we get a 
very good idea of the connection in the past of some of the present 
well-defined orders of insects. 


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