Peter Skene Ogden

Canadian fur trader and explorer
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Quick Facts
Born:
1794, Quebec [Canada]
Died:
September 27, 1854, Oregon City, Oregon Territory [U.S.]

Peter Skene Ogden (born 1794, Quebec [Canada]—died September 27, 1854, Oregon City, Oregon Territory [U.S.]) was a Canadian fur trader and a major explorer of the American West—the Great Basin, Oregon and northern California, and the Snake River country. He was the first to traverse the intermountain West from north to south.

Ogden’s parents were American loyalists who had fled to Canada (via England) during the American Revolution. In his youth Ogden left his home in eastern Canada to embark on the adventurous life of a fur trader with the North West Company and was stationed at Île-à-la-Crosse during the period of the company’s murderous rivalry with the Hudson’s Bay Company. During this period he acquired his reputation as a tough, ruthless trader. The two companies merged in 1821, and Ogden was admitted as a chief trader two years later; he remained working for the company in the area west of the Rockies.

As a fur trader Ogden automatically became an explorer of new territory. For many years he led annual trading expeditions to deal with Native Americans in competition with American traders operating out of St. Louis, Missouri. In 1825 he reached the river in Utah that now bears his name; he explored southern Oregon and northeastern California in 1826–27, discovered the Humboldt River in northern Nevada in 1828, and made the first reconnaissance of the eastern face of the Sierra Nevada in 1829, discovering Carson and Owens Lakes.

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Exploration and Discovery

From 1831 to 1844 Ogden superintended trade in the British Columbia area, becoming a chief factor (agent) in 1835 and principal officer in the Columbia Department of the Hudson’s Bay Company from 1845 on. He was remembered for having rescued the survivors of the Whitman Massacre, in which the missionary Marcus Whitman, his wife, and 12 others were slain in 1847 by Cayuse Indians.

Ogden knew a number of Native American languages and was twice married to Native American women, by each of whom he had children. He always remained a British subject. He spoke French as fluently as English and was known to traders as “Monsieur Pete.” His Traits of American-Indian Life and Character (1853) was published anonymously in London.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.