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Heartland/Hinterland. And The Staple trade. Definitions . Staple - Raw material, such as fish, timber, or wheat, which dominates an economy’s exports Heartland - a region that is the economic centre of a country or empire
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Heartland/Hinterland And The Staple trade
Definitions • Staple- Raw material, such as fish, timber, or wheat, which dominates an economy’s exports • Heartland- a region that is the economic centre of a country or empire • Hinterland- a region that provides the resources needed by the heartland • Staple thesis- an economic theory advanced by Harold Innis that argues that the development of a resource –based economy influenced Canada’s political and social development
Mercantilism and Staple Resources • European expansionism was motivated by the desire for the riches that the Spaniards had brought back to Europe in the 15th century • Instead, European explorers found other resources-fish, furs, timber, and wheat • Two-way system: hinterland provided rich natural resources <> heartland manufactured goods from these materials<>Sold back to hinterland
Cod fishery • In the late 1400’s Europe needed a new food source • John Cabot introduced English to cod fisheries off the coast of Newfoundland • 2 methods: • Wet (green): fish brought onboard to be cleaned, filleted, heavily salted, then shipped back to Europe • Dry: fish taken to shore, cleaned, split, lightly salted, cleaned a few days later again, then dried This caused seasonal fishing villages to be built along Atlantic coast (eg. Newfoundland)
How does the cod fishery illustrate mercantilism at its most basic? • Fish exported solely for the benefit of the mother country • No incentive for local businesses to develop around that industry • No local infrastructure development by mother country in colonies (roads, agricultural settlements)
Fur trade • Jacques Cartier explored the interior of the continent via the St. Lawrence River • Through contact with native peoples, discovered the valuable staple commodity- furs • Required assistance of native people to get the furs; French used Hurons to get furs from the Innu (Montagnais) and Abenaki • French lived in fur-trading posts along the St. Lawrence River
Hudson’s Bay Company • English wanted to be part of the lucrative fur trade, but had not established settlement in the interior • 1610> Henry Hudson opened up the area around the Hudson Bay • 1670> a Royal charter created the Hudson’s Bay Company, giving it a monopoly over all fur trading in territories drained by rivers flowing into Hudson Bay
Map of drainage basin • www.meds-sdmm.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/alphapro/ zmp/Maps/map3basins.gi • The charter gave the Company political and economic control over almost 8 million km² of territory • Much rivalry occurred between the French and English, until 1763
www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/troufs/ Buffalo/images/pf046995.jp
Early Hudson's Bay Company Buildings at Athabasca Landing, Provincial Archives of Alberta, Ernest Brown Collection, A3264.
www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/wa/ pierce/postcards/hudbay-s.jpg
Impact of the fur trade • Profits centralized in heartland (Europe) • Production of metal and cloth products exchanged for furs also centralized in heartland • Added to knowledge of N. American continent • Traders’ movements established beginnings of business interests and transportation infra structures • Initially beneficial to native peoples, but disease, increased warfare, displacement, loss of sense of identity occurred