When Kit was just a toddler in Kentucky, where the Carson family had been neighbors of the Boones for a couple of generation, his father loaded up his family and their meager belongings and headed west along the Boone Trail. At that time the settlement farthest west was Franklin, Missouri and there Kit's father built his family a rough log cabin.
By the year 1822, when Kit was thirteen years old, several factors were greatly influencing his life and would shape his future. First of all Mexico had won her independence from Spain. Prior to Mexico's independence Spain allowed no trade with the Americans but now Mexico clamored for American merchandise. Another factor was a man in England named Beau Brummel who had, in 1800, popularized the beaver hat. By 1822 the rivers of England, as well as the eastern portion of the United States, had depleted their beaver population. Only in the unknown streams of the Rocky Mountains was the beaver bountiful, and they were going for the unheard of price of six dollars a piece for a prime pelt.
With the Santa Fe trade, and the outfitting of trappers for the beaver trade, Franklin, Missouri was about the busiest place on the frontier. And young Kit Carson saw it all happening, as well as passing him by as he worked in the saddler shop. This bandy-legged boy who stood barely five feet tall watched big, raw-boned men in buckskins getting ready to travel the Santa Fe Trail or head to the Far West in search of beaver. But Kit, bound out to David Workman in his saddler shop, was saddled with a seven-year apprenticeship. Kit knew what he wanted and decided that some day he'd have it, and it wasn't repairing harness and saddles for the rest of his life.
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