Pacific Fur Company
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The Pacific Fur Company was founded by John Jacob Astor on June 23, 1810, as a subsidiary of his American Fur Company. In 1811, the company established a trading post at Astoria at the mouth of the Columbia River. Astor lost this post during the War of 1812.
Astor lost money on the company. Astor asked a captain named Jonathan Thorn to lead his sea expedition. This was a bad choice. Thorn was impatient and wanted to find the passage as soon as possible. He sent a small dinghy to the mouth of the Columbia. At the time there was a rough storm happening. He killed eight men. He also left nine men on an island for being "unloyal". He had to be held at gunpoint to bring them back. On August 2, 1810, he also sunk the Tonquin and killed 61 men.
Only one of Astor's three expeditions, the second of his land expeditions, was successful. In that mission, the men sent out discovered the spot that eventually became Fort Astoria.