Káma-Kapúska! Making Marks in Indian Country, 1833–34

Scholarly Article note 12

These Middle Ground patterns in multiple locations across North America created French métis cultures over many generations. James Kipp, the American Fur Company (AFC) trader who ran Fort Clark during the Europeans’ visit, was married to a local Numak'aki woman and had adopted a son. It was through these relationships that Kipp then extended various invitations to the Europeans during their stay. Kipp’s integration into local Native life should not be taken as the norm across the frontier or the AFC, however, as Wied-Neuwied’s notes make clear that forts in this period reflected the personalities of the men who ran them, and others in leadership positions were not as attuned or integrated as Kipp.

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