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Articles

Vol. 2 (1990)

Trade Beads from Hudson's Bay Company Fort Vancouver (1829-1860), Vancouver, Washington

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5399/beads/2.6074
Submitted
June 27, 2024
Published
1990-01-01

Abstract

Archaeological excavations conducted at Hudson’s Bay Company Fort Vancouver recovered 100,000+ trade beads of 152 varieties, including 80 varieties of drawn, 57 varieties of wound, 10 varieties of mold-pressed, and 3 varieties of blown glass beads, as well as one variety each of “Prosser-molded” ceramic and cut-stone beads. An additional 6000+ beads recovered from excavations at the HBC Kanaka village and riverside complex sites may include 39 additional varieties possibly associated with the HBC occupation. The bead assemblage has contributed to the initial definition of a complex temporal and cultural horizon marker dating from 1829 to 1860 for the Pacific Northwest, and provides insights into mid-19th-century Native-American and Euro-American bead preferences. Analysis of the assemblage demonstrates difficulties inherent in the existing archaeological bead classification system, and suggestions for revisions are discussed.