(1848 photograph) The treaty was negotiated for the US by
Albert Gallatin, ambassador to France, and
Richard Rush, minister to the UK; and for the UK by
Frederick John Robinson, Treasurer of the
Royal Navy and member of the
privy council, and
Henry Goulburn, an undersecretary of state. Despite the relatively friendly nature of the agreement, it resulted in a fierce struggle for control of the Oregon Country for the following two decades. The British-chartered Hudson's Bay Company, having previously established a trading network centered on
Fort Vancouver on the lower Columbia River, with other forts in what is now eastern Washington and Idaho as well as on the Oregon Coast and in Puget Sound, undertook a harsh campaign to restrict encroachment by US fur traders to the area. By the 1830s, the policy of discouraging settlement was undercut to some degree by the actions of
John McLoughlin, Chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Vancouver, who regularly provided relief and welcome to US immigrants who had arrived at the post over the
Oregon Trail. By the mid-1840s, the tide of US immigration, as well as a US political movement to claim the entire territory, led to a renegotiation of the agreement. The
Oregon Treaty in 1846 permanently established the
49th parallel as the boundary between the United States and British North America to the Pacific Ocean. == See also ==