Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Mountain Men: America’s First Frontier Legends
Episode Date: June 27, 2026Tell me your favorite episode for the 6th anniversary show! Before cowboys became the symbol of the American West, there were the mountain men. They crossed unmapped passes, trapped beavers in icy... streams, lived among Native peoples, and helped open the way for the great migrations across the continent. Their world was dangerous, lonely, and short-lived, but their impact on American history and legend was enormous. Learn more about the history, reality, and legends behind the rise of the mountain man trappers on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Saily Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans! Use code everythingeverywhere at checkout. Download the Saily app or go to https://saily.com/everythingeverywhere ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED TrueWerk Get 15% off your first order at truewerk.com with code everything DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code everything for 20% off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Before Cowboys became the symbol of the American West, there were the mountain men.
They crossed unmapped passages, trapped beavers and icy streams, lived among native people,
and helped open the way for the great migrations across the continent.
Their world was dangerous, lonely, and short-lived, but their impact on American history
and legend was enormous.
Learn more about the history, reality, and legends behind the rise of the mountain men on this
episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Shopping for a car should be exciting, not exhausting.
But let's be honest, sometimes it feels like wandering through a maze blindfolded.
You're comparing prices, wondering if the deal is actually good, trying to figure out whether
that great opportunity is really a great opportunity, or if you're about to regret it
six months later.
That's why I love car gurus.
When I'm looking at vehicles online, I want the information up front.
I don't want to play detective.
And with car gurus, you can see details.
Realt ratings, price history, and dealer reviews all in one place.
It makes the whole process feel a lot more transparent and a whole lot less stressful.
And I really like the search tools on the app.
You can narrow things down exactly the way you want.
Make, model, mileage, price range.
And you can set real-time alerts for price drops and new listings.
So you're not constantly checking back every five minutes like some caffeinated maniac at two in the morning.
It's no wonder Car Gurus is the number one rated car shopping app in Canada
on the Apple app and Google Play Store.
Car Gurus has hundreds of thousands of cars from top-rated dealers,
plus deal ratings, price history, and dealer reviews on listings,
so you can shop with confidence.
And when you're finally ready to buy,
Car Gurus connects you with trusted dealerships,
helping make the whole process transparent and hassle-free.
Buy your next car today with Car Gurus at Carguerus.ca.
Go to Carguerus.ca to make sure your big deal is the best deal.
That's C-A-R-G-U-R-U-S-D-C-A.
Carguerus.com.
Visit Bet-M-G-G-M-G-Casino and check out the newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
Bet-M-D-M-G-M-Gense remind you to play responsibly.
19-plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2-600 to speak to an advisor,
free of charge.
MDM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario.
The mountain men were one of the most distinctive groups in the history of the American West.
They were hunters, trappers, scouts, traders, guides, and explorers, living in the Rocky Mountains and surrounding regions during the first half of the 19th century.
Their heyday lasted only about a generation, roughly from 1820 to the 1840s.
But their influence on American expansion, Western mythology, and the mapping.
on the continent was enormous. They were not cowboys, although popular culture later often
confused the two. Cowboys were mostly associated with the post-Civil War cattle frontier.
Mountain men came earlier. They were part of the fur trade frontier, and their world was one of
beaver pelts, native alliances, brutal weather, and prolonged isolation. Beaver pelts had long
been a coveted North American commodity. The pelts produced
iconic waterproof hats and were a fashion necessity for any aspiring gentleman on either side of
the Atlantic. During the 17th century fur trade operation centered around the Great Lakes and the St.
Lawrence and Hudson River valleys, where the beaver lived in abundance. The dynamics of the early
trade in beaver pelch relied heavily on the control that native people maintained over the supply chain.
Europeans seldom did the actual trapping. Instead, monopolies like the Hudson Bay Company controlled
the trade. From fortified forts in beaver-rich regions, the company officials stayed at the
forts and waited for native trappers to bring them the pelts. The forts became centers of an elaborate
barter system in which native traders swapped pelts for technology such as firearms and other
items like blankets, beads, and glass. The trade flourished until beavers were hunted to near
extinction in the upper Midwest. The trade pitted tribe against tribe and European nations against each
other. As I discussed in a previous episode on the Beaver, the Beaver Wars were the harsh
reality of the competition for the increasingly scarce pelts in the east. This scarcity drove
the Beaver Trade further west. In the wake of the Louisiana Purchase, the Beaver Trade
pushed across the Mississippi River, over the Great Plains, and into the Rocky Mountains.
But this new era looked very different from its eastern predecessor. The new system broke the old
native monopoly that had functioned as the center of the beaver pell trade. The days of forts had
passed. The risks associated with these type of forts had simply become too great. Outside of the basic
risk of simply overhunting an area and having a fort as an expensive relic of trade, there was the
challenge of fort security. Several tribes, most notably the Blackfeet, viewed encroachment as an act of
hostility and responded with violence. The new 19th century Western trade in Beaver Peltz was conducted
by a new type of trapper, the mountain man, as well as a new economic system, the rendezvous.
The rendezvous system was a highly efficient mobile marketplace invented in 1825 that revolutionized
the Rocky Mountain fur trade by replacing permanent frontier forts with an annual wilderness gathering.
Every summer, a massive overland supply train would travel from St. Louis to a pre-arranged
mountain valley, bringing vital goods such as gunpowder, whiskey, and tobacco directly to the field.
Hundreds of mountain men and thousands of Native American trappers would converge on the site to
barter their spring harvest of beaver peltz for supplies. This system eliminated the steep
financial overhead and severe security risks of maintaining forts and hostile territory,
creating a temporary multi-week trading zone. The mountain men who gathered at this rendezvous,
often left the site in debt.
The trapper would spend nearly the entire year gathering pelts in some of the most dangerous terrain in the country,
risking their lives, fighting the elements and hostile natives, to secure enough pelts to trade the rendezvous.
They had no other options for getting supplies.
What they brought to the rendezvous would be traded for what they need and for many things they didn't.
After acquiring fresh gunpowder, new traps, lead, dried meats, soap, and, of course, a full cache of whiskey,
The trappers left the rendezvous heavily in debt.
And it was a vicious cycle.
The only way to pay the debt was to trap for another year
and hope that the haul you brought to the next rendezvous
would help eliminate the debt.
Shockingly, there was no shortage of candidates
who wanted to live this lifestyle.
The history of the Mountain Man is filled with some of the most unique characters
in American history.
Many of their stories may be well-known to moviegoers
thanks to iconic films like The Mountain Man, The Revenant, and of course Robert Redford's
Jeremiah Johnson. The films may not always be accurate, in fact they seldom are, but they do
manage to depict the period's challenges of living such a life. Jeremiah Johnson is perhaps
the most famous of the Mountain Man archetypes, but defining who Johnson was is no easy task.
There are a few things we know for certain about him. First, if you were to address
him as Jeremiah, he likely wouldn't know that you were talking to him.
Author Vardis Fisher invented the name Jeremiah in the mid-20th century for his novel,
The Mountain Man, which served as the basis for Robert Redford's 1972 film, Jeremiah Johnson.
Secondly, while Jeremiah Johnson is no doubt a classic film of this genre and ranks as
Robert Redford's favorite movie he ever made, it's not an accurate portrayal of the
mountain man it was trying to depict.
In the movie, Jeremiah Johnson is a veteran of the Mexican-American War who leaves that
life behind in search of greater meaning in the wilderness.
The movie actually has more Robert Redford in the story than the original Mountain
Man book.
In the movie, Johnson is portrayed as a kind and thoughtful, even introspective man who
begins life as a trapper as part of a spiritual journey.
Reality was significantly different.
The true inspiration for the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the
inspiration for the tale was a New Jersey native named John Garrison, who after serving in the
Navy became a military fugitive for striking a superior officer. Abandoning his military past,
he adopted the alias John Johnson and embarked on a new existence as a mountain trapper.
John Johnson, the Mountain Man, is much more of a mystery. Part of the movie was Jeremiah Johnson's
ongoing feud with the Crow people. Evidence suggests that John
Johnson also had a feud with the crow, one that originated after his wife, a member of the
Flathead Band, was killed while he was away on a trapping expedition. Blaming the crow,
Johnson initiated a campaign of vengeance against the tribe. The film covered this,
and historians generally consider it to be broadly accurate. However, it's what the film
didn't cover that made Johnson famous. Another name for Johnson is
liver-eating Johnson. After his trapping days were over, Johnson joined the Hardwick Wild West
show in Montana. During the show, Johnson leaned into his reputation as an Indian fighter. He even
embraced his reputation as a scalper and the eater of livers. The supposed reason for eating his
enemy's liver was to deny them access to the afterlife. And while very dark, the account is
probably not true considering Johnson's own words. He noted, quote,
We had a 300-yard run to the bushes.
I threw him down just at the edge of the brush.
Then I scalped him, and then I sang and danced some more.
Then I ran my knife into him and killed him, and part of his liver came out with the knife.
Just then, a sort of squeamish old fellow named Ross came up running.
I waved the knife with the liver on it in the air and cried out,
Come on, have a piece.
It'll stay in your stomach till dinner.
And I kind of made believe to take a bite.
End quote.
It's the consensus of historians that just,
Johnson did not engage in ritualistic cannibalism of his victims.
Johnson's last days were spent in a veteran's home in Santa Monica, California.
When he died in the year 1900, authorities buried him in a local military cemetery near a busy
freeway.
However, Johnson had told people that he wanted to be buried near the mountains and the animals.
A coalition was formed to insist on a reburial.
After some difficulties over completing claims with the neighboring town of Red Lodge, Montana,
the coalition secured a spot at Old Trail Town in Cody, Wyoming.
One of the pallbearers at his new final resting spot in 1974 was none other than Robert Redford.
An equally famous account of the Life of a Legendary Mountain Man was Leonardo DiCaprio's
2015 film The Revenant, which tells the story of the famous trapper, Hugh Glass.
Glass was born in the 1780s and was part of the first wave of trappers drawn to the mountain
West in search of solitude and fortune. Glass's claim to fame was his iron will to live.
A grizzly bear attacked Glass in 1823 while on a trapping expedition, which caused horrific
injuries to him. According to the History Channel, quote, Glass suffered extensive wounds,
including a broken leg, punctured throat, and deep back lacerations exposing several ribs.
His fellow frontiersmen felt certain he would die from his wounds by the morning, but he didn't,
so they carried him for two days on a litter made from tree boughs.
Deep and hostile Indian territory, the group felt an urgency to keep moving.
So the leader recruited two volunteers to stay with Glass until he died and give him a proper burial.
End quote.
The two men did stay with Glass, but after five days, they abandoned him to die.
And before leaving, they took his survival tools and his most prized possession, his rifle.
Glass did not die. Near death, he crawled for more than 200 miles towards the Missouri River,
living on berries and snakes. One thought drove him onward, to reclaim his rifle and punish the men
who had left him for dead. With the help of the Lakota people, Glass obtained a canoe and
reconnected with his former group at Fort Kiowa in South Dakota. He also met one of the men who had left him,
a teenage trapper and explorer named Jim Bridger.
Bridger would go on to become famous for discovering the Great Salt Lake and many of the features of what is now Yellowstone National Park.
He explained that they thought his death was imminent and that they didn't want his tools falling into native hands.
Glass forgave Bridger, but continued searching for the other man, John Fitzgerald.
Fitzgerald had ultimately joined the army knowing that vengeance against a soldier was not impossible.
Glass had to settle for a legal remedy, suing the U.S. Army to recover his beloved Flintlock rifle.
Glass got his gun back, along with a handsome $300 settlement for his troubles.
The Mountain Man occupied a brief but unforgettable chapter in the history of the American West.
They weren't settlers in the traditional sense, nor were they cowboys, but trappers, traitors,
traders, guides, and wanderers who lived at the edge of the known world.
The era of the mountain man may have only lasted a few decades,
but their image still shapes how we imagine the American West today.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Research in writing for this episode was provided by Joel Hermanson.
My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon.
Your support helps make this podcast possible.
And I also want to remind everyone about the,
community groups on Facebook and Discord, as this is where everything happens outside of the podcast.
As always, if you leave a review on any of the major podcast apps, you too can have it run in the show.
