Both
Companies in danger—Edward
Ellice, a mediator—George
Simpson, the man of destiny—Old
feuds buried—Gatherings at
Norway House—Governor Simpson's
skill—His marvellous
energy—Reform in trade—Morality
low—A famous canoe voyage
—Salutes fired—Pompous ceremony
at Norway House—Strains of the
bagpipe—Across the Rocky
Mountains—Fort Vancouver
visited—Great executive
ability—The governor
knighted—Sir George goes around
the world—Troubles of a
book—Meets the Russians—Estimate
of Sir George.
Affairs in
Rupert's Land had now reached
their worst and had begun to
mend, the strong hand of British
law had made itself felt, and
hostilities had ceased from Fort
William to far-off Qu'Appelle
and to the farther distant
Mackenzie River. The feeling of
antagonism was, however,
stirring in the bosoms of both
parties. The death of Lord
Selkirk in France brought the
opposing fur traders closer
together, and largely through
the influence of Hon. Edward
Ellice, a prominent Nor'-Wester,
a reconciliation between the
hostile Companies took place and
a union was formed on March
26th, 1821, under the name of
the Hudson's Bay Company.
The affairs
of both Companies had been
brought to the verge of
destruction by the conflicts,
and the greatest satisfaction
prevailed both in England and
Canada at the union. The
prospect now was that the
stability of the English Company
and the energy of the Canadian
combination would result in a
great development of the fur
trade.
As is so
often the case, the man for the
occasion also appeared. This was
not an experienced man, not a
man long trained in the fur
trade, not oven a man who had
done more than spend the winter
in the fur country at Lake Athabasca.
He was simply a young clerk, who
had approved himself in the
London Hudson's Bay Company
office to Andrew Colville, a
relation of the Earl of Selkirk.
He was thus free from the
prejudices of either party and
young enough to be adaptable in
the new state of things. This
man was George Simpson, a native
of Ross-shire, in Scotland. He
was short of stature, but
strong, vigorous, and observing.
He was noted for an ease and
affability of manner that stood
him in good stead all through
his forty years of experience as
chief officer of the Hudson's
Bay Company. He became a noted
traveller, and made the canoe
voyage from Montreal to the
interior many times. For many
years the Nor'-Westers, as we
have seen, held their annual
gathering at Grand Portage on
Lake Superior, and it was to
this place that the chief
officers had annually resorted.
The new element of the English
Company coming in from Hudson
Bay now made a change necessary.
Accordingly, Norway House on
Lake Winnipeg became the new
centre, and for many years the
annual gathering of the Company
leaders in the active trade took
place here. The writer has had
the privilege of perusing the
minutes of some of these
gatherings, which were held
shortly after Governor Simpson
was appointed. These are
valuable as showing the work
done by the young Governor and
his method of dealing with
difficulties.
While it
has always been said that
Governor Simpson was dictatorial
and overbearing, it will be seen
that at this stage he was
conciliatory and considerate. He
acted like the chairman of a
representative body of men
called together to consult over
their affairs, the members
having equal rights. On June
23rd, 1823, one of his first
meetings was held at Norway
House. Reports were given in
detail from the various posts
and districts in turn. Bow
River, at the foot of the Rocky
Mountains, was reported as
abandoned; from the Upper Red
River, it was stated that on
account of prairie fires the
buffalo were few, and that the
wild Assiniboines had betaken
themselves to the Saskatchewan
to enjoy its plenty.
From Lower
Red River came the news that the
attempt to prevent the natives
trading in furs had been carried
rather too far. Furs belonging
to a petty trader, Laronde, had
been seized, confiscated, and
sent to Hudson Bay- It was
learned that Laronde had not
been duly aware of the new
regulations, and it was ordered
that compensation be made to
him. This was done, and he and
his family were fully satisfied.
The Catholic Mission at Pembina
had been moved down to the
Forks, where now St. Boniface
stands, and the desire was
expressed that the traders
should withdraw their trade as
much as possible from the south
side of the United States'
boundary line.
The reports
from the Selkirk settlement were
of a favourable kind. The Sioux,
who had come from their land of
the Dakotas to meet Lord
Selkirk, were not encouraged to
make any further visits. The
Selkirk colony was said to be
very prosperous, and it is
stated that it was the intention
of the new Company soon to take
over the property belonging to
Lord Selkirk in the colony.
Some
conflicts had arisen in the Lac
La Pluie (Rainy Lake) district,
and these were soothed and
settled. Reference is made to
the fact that Grand Portage
having been found to be on
United States' territory, new
arrangements had been made for
avoiding collision with the
Americans.
Reports
were even given in of prosperous
trade in the far-distant
Columbia, and steps were taken
at various points to reduce the
number of posts, the union of
the Companies having made this
possible.
In all
these proceedings, there may be
seen the influence of the
diplomatic and shrewd young
Governor doing away with
difficulties and making plans
for the extension of a
successful trade in the future.
It was not surprising that the
Council invested Governor
Simpson with power to act during
the adjournment.
Sometimes
at Moose Factory, now at York,
then at Norway House, and again
at Red River, the energetic
Governor paid his visits. He was
noted for the imperious and
impetuous haste with which he
drove his voyageurs through the
lonely wilds. For years a story
was prevalent in the Red River
country that a stalwart French
voyageur, who was a favourite
with the Governor, was once, in
crossing the Lake of the Woods,
so irritated by the Governor's
unreasonable urging, that he
seized his tormentor, who was
small in stature, by the
shoulders, and dipped him into
the lake, giving vent to his
feelings in an emphatic French
oath.
The
Governor knew how to attach his
people to himself, and he
gathered around him in the
course of his career of forty
years a large number of men most
devoted to the interests of the
Company. His visits to Fort
Garry on the Red River were
always notable. He was
approachable to the humblest,
and listened to many a complaint
and grievance with apparent
sympathy and great patience. He
had many of the arts of the
courtier along with his
indomitable will.
At another
of his gatherings at Norway
House with the traders in 1823
we have records of the greatest
interest. The canoe had been the
favourite craft of the
Nor'-Westers, but he now
introduced boats and effected a
saving of one-third in wages,
and he himself superintended the
sending of an expedition of four
boats with twenty men by way of
Nelson River from York Factory
to far distant Athabasca. He was
quick to see those who were the
most profitable as workmen for
the Company. On one occasion he
gives his estimate as follows:
"Canadians (i.e., French
Canadians) preferable to
Orkneymen. Orkneymen less
expensive, but slow. Less
physical strength and spirits.
Obstinate if brought young into
the service. Scotch and Irish,
when numerous, quarrelsome,
independent, and mutinous."
At this
time it was determined to give
up the practice of bestowing
presents upon the Indians. It
was found better to pay them
liberally for their pelts,
making them some advances for
clothing.
The minutes
state at this time that there
was little progress in the moral
and religious instruction of the
Indians. The excessive use of
spirits, which still continued,
was now checked; the quantity
given in 1822 and 1823 was
reduced one-half and the
strength of the spirits lowered.
Missionaries could not be
employed with success, on
account of the small number of
Indians at any one point. The
only hope seemed to be to have
schools at Red River and to
remove the children from their
parents to these. Many
difficulties, arising from the
objections of the parents, were,
however, sure to come in the
way.
Evidences
were not wanting of chief
factors being somewhat alienated
from the Governor, but those
dissatisfied were promptly
invited to the Council and their
coolness removed. In carrying
out discipline among the men
some difficulty was experienced,
as the long conflicts between
the Companies had greatly
demoralized the employes. One
plan suggested was that
offenders should be fined and
the fines vested in a charitable
fund. It was found that this
would only do for Europeans. "A
blow was better for a Canadian,"
and though this was highly
reprobated, it was justified by
experience.
At a
meeting at York Factory
instructions were given to Chief
Factor Stuart on Lake Superior
to complete and launch a new
vessel much larger than the
Discovery, then afloat. Captain
Bayfield, R.N., the British
officer surveying the lakes,
wintered at this time with his
crew at Fort William, and the
work of surveying the lakes
promised to take him three
summers.
The
following entry, September 5th,
1823, shows the considerate way
in which the Governor sought the
advice of his Council:—"Governor
Simpson requested permission to
visit England. If granted, will
hold himself ready to return to
Canada in 1825 and proceed by
express canoe in time to make
arrangements for the season." At
the same date, 1823, a step in
advance was taken in having a
permanent and representative
council to regulate the affairs
of Red River Settlement. The
entry reads, "Captain Robert
Parker Pelly, Governor of
Assiniboia, Rev. Mr. West, Rev.
Mr. Jones, Mr. Logan added to
the council. Jacob Corrigal,
chief trader, appointed sheriff,
vice Andrew Stewart, deceased.
Rev. Mr. Jones appointed
chaplain at a salary of 100l.
during absence of Mr. West. He
will officiate at Red River."
There lies
before the writer a work
entitled "Peace River; a Canoe
Voyage from the Hudson Bay to
the Pacific." It was written by
Archibald Macdonald and
annotated between forty and
fifty years after by Malcolm
McLeod, of Ottawa. It gives a
graphic account of the state
maintained by Governor Simpson
and his method of appealing to
the imagination of the Indians
and Company servants alike. The
journey was made from ocean to
ocean, the point of departure
being York Factory, on Hudson
Bay, and the destination Fort
Vancouver, on the Columbia
River. In addition to Macdonald,
Governor Simpson took with him
Dr. Hamlyn as medical adviser,
and in two light canoes,
provided with nine men each, the
party went with extraordinary
speed along the waterways which
had already been the scenes of
many a picturesque and even
sanguinary spectacle.
Fourteen
chief officers—factors and
traders—and as many more clerks
were summoned on July 12th,
1828, to give a send-off to the
important party. As the pageant
passed up Hayes River, loud
cheers were given and a salute
of seven guns by the garrison.
The voyageurs then struck up one
of the famous chansons by which
they beguiled the lonely
waterways, and with their
dashing paddles, hastened away
to the interior.
So well
provided an expedition, with its
tents for camping, suitable
utensils for the camp fire, arms
to meet any danger, provisions
including wine for the
gentlemen, and spirits for the
voyageurs, was not long in
ascending the watercourses to
Norway House, where the outlet
of Lake Winnipeg was reached.
The arrival at Norway House was
signalized by much pomp. The
residents of the fort were on
the qui vive for the important
visitor. The Union Jack, with
its magic letters "H. B. C,"
floated from the tall flagstaff
of Norway pine, erected on
Signal Hill. Indians from their
neighbouring haunts were present
in large numbers, and the lordly
Red men, at their best when "en
fete," were accompanied by
bevies of their dusky mates, who
looked with admiring gaze on the
"Kitche Okema" who was arriving.
The party
had prepared for the occasion.
They had, before reaching the
fort, landed and put themselves
in proper trim and paid as much
attention to their toilets as
circumstances would permit.
Fully ready, they resumed their
journey, and with flashing
paddles speeded through the deep
rocky gorge, quickly turned the
point, and from the gaudily
painted canoe of the Governor
with high prow, where sat the
French Canadian guide, who for
the time commanded, there pealed
forth the strains of the
bagpipes, while from the second
canoe was heard the sound of the
chief factor's bugle. As the
canoes came near the shore, the
soft and lively notes fell on
the ear of "La Claire Fontaine"
from the lively voyageurs.
Altogether, it was a scene very
impressive to the quiet
residents of the post.
The time of
the Governor was very fully
occupied at each stopping-place.
A personal examination and
inspection of each post, of its
officers and employes,
buildings, books, trade, and
prospects was made with
"greatest thoroughness." Fond as
the Governor was of pomp, when
the pageant was passed, then he
was a man of iron will and
keenest observation. His
correspondence at each
resting-place was great, and he
was said to be able to do the
work of three men, though twelve
years after the date of the
present Journey he became
affected with partial blindness.
Fort
Chipewyan had always maintained
its pre-eminence as an important
depot of the fur trade. The
travelling emperor of the fur
traders was captured by its
picturesque position as well as
by its historic memories. Here
he found William McGillivray,
with whose name the fur traders
conjured, and under invitation
from the Governor the former
Nor'-Wester and his family
joined the party in crossing the
Rockies. The waving of flags,
firing of guns, shouting of the
Indians and employes, and the
sound of singing and bagpipe
made the arrival and departure
as notable as it had been at
Norway House.
A little
more than a month after they had
left York Factory the
indomitable travellers entered
Peace River, in order to cross
the Rocky Mountains. Fort
Vermilion, Fort Dunvegan, St.
John, all had their objects of
interest for the party, but one
of the chief was that it was a
scarce year, and at Dunvegan, as
well as at Fort McLeod across
the mountains, there was not
enough of food at hand to supply
the visitors. Cases of dispute
were settled by the Governor,
who presided with the air of a
chief justice. Caution and
advice were given in the most
impressive fashion, after the
manner of a father confessor, to
the Indians, fault being found
with their revelries and the
scenes of violence which
naturallv followed from these.
From McLeod
to Fort St. James the journey
was made by land. Thus the crest
of the Rocky Mountains was
crossed, the voyageurs packing
on their shoulders the
impedimenta, and horses being
provided for the gentlemen of
the party. This was the
difficult portage which so often
tried the traders. Fort St.
James, it will be remembered,
was at Lake Stuart, where Fraser
started on his notable Journey
down the Fraser River. It was
the chief place and emporium of
New Caledonia. The entry is thus
described: "Unfurling the
British ensign, it was given to
the guide, who marched first.
After him came the band,
consisting of buglers and
bagpipers. Next came the
Governor, mounted, and behind
him Hamlyn and Macdonald also on
horses. Twenty men loaded like
beasts of burden, formed the
line; after them a loaded horse
; and finally, McGillivray with
his wife and family brought up
the rear."
Thus
arranged, the imposing body was
put in motion. Passing over a
gentle elevation, they came in
full view of the fort, when the
bugle sounded, a gun was fired,
and the bagpipes struck up the
famous march of the clans, "Si
coma leum codagh na sha" ("If
you will it, war"). Trader
Douglas, who was in charge of
the fort, replied with small
ordnance and guns, after which
he advanced and received the
distinguished visitors in front
of the fort.
Passing on,
by September 24th the party came
to Fort Alexandria, four days
down the Fraser, and reached
Kamloops, the junction of the
North and South Thompson. At
every point of importance, the
Governor took occasion to
assemble the natives and
employes, and gave them good
advice, "exhorting them to
honesty, frugality, temperance,"
finishing his prelections with a
gift of tobacco or some
commodity appreciated by them.
Running rapids, exposed to
continual danger, but fortunate
in their many escapes, they
reached Fort Langley, near the
mouth of the Fraser River, two
days less than three months from
the time of their starting from
York Factory. From this point,
Governor Simpson made his way to
Fort Vancouver on the Columbia,
then the chief post on the
Pacific Coast, and in the
following year returned over the
mountains, satisfied that he had
gained much knowledge and that
he had impressed himself on
trader, engagé, and Indian chief
alike.
With
marvellous energy, the
Governor-in-Chief, as he was
called, covered the vast
territory committed to his care.
Establishments in unnecessary
and unremunerative places were
cut down or closed. Governor
Simpson, while in some respects
fond of the "show and
circumstance" which an old and
honourable Company could afford,
was nevertheless a keen business
man, and never forgot that he
was the head of a Company whose
object was trade. It cannot be
denied that the personal element
entered largely into his
administration. He had his
favourites among the traders, ho
was not above petty revenges
upon those who thwarted his
plans, and his decisions were
sometimes harsh and tyrannical,
but his long experience,
extending over forty years, was
marked on the whole by most
successful administration and by
a restoration of the prestige of
the Company, so nearly destroyed
at the time of the union.
In the year
1839, when the Colonial Office
was engaged in settling up the
Canadian rebellion which a
blundering colonial system had
brought upon both Lower and
Upper Canada, the British
Government sought to strengthen
itself among those who had
loyally stood by British
influence. Governor Simpson and
the whole staff of the Hudson's
Bay Company had been intensely
loyal, and it was most natural
and right that the young Queen
Victoria, who had lately assumed
the reins of power, should
dispense such a favour as that
of knighthood on the doughty
leader of the fur traders. Sir
George Simpson worthily bore the
honours bestowed upon him by his
Sovereign, and in 1841 undertook
a voyage round the world,
crossing, as he did so, Rupert's
Land and the territories in his
rapid march. Two portly volumes
containing an itinerary of the
voyage, filling nine hundred
pages, appeared some five years
after this journey was
completed. This work is given in
the first person as a recital by
the Governor of what he saw and
passed through. Internal
evidence, however, as well as
local tradition on the Red
River, shows another hand to
have been concerned in giving it
a literary form. It is reported
that the moulding agent in style
and arrangement was Judge Thom,
the industrious and
strong-minded recorder of the
Red River Settlement.
The work is
dedicated to the directors of
the Hudson's Bay Company. These
were nine in number, and their
names are nearly all well known
in connection with the trade of
this period. Sir John Henry
Pelly, long famous for his
leadership; Andrew Colville,
Deputy-Governor, who, by family
connection with Lord Selkirk,
long held an important place;
Benjamin Harrison; John Halkett,
another kinsman of Lord Selkirk;
H. H. Berens; A. Chapman, M.P.;
Edward Ellice, M.P., a chief
agent in the Union and a most
famous trader; the Earl of
Selkirk, the son of the founder;
and R. Weynton. The names of
almost all these traders will be
found commemorated in forts and
trading-posts throughout
Rupert's Land.
Leaving
London, March 3rd, 1841, the
Governor called at Halifax, but
disembarked at Boston, went by
land to Montreal, and navigation
being open on May 4th on the St.
Lawrence, he and his party
started and soon reached Ste.
Anne, on Montreal Island. The
evidence of the humour of Sir
George's editor, who knew
Montreal well, is seen in his
referring to Moore's "Canadian
Boat Song," in saying, "At Ste.
Anne's Rapid, on the Ottawa, we
neither sang our evening hymn
nor bribed the Lady Patroness
with shirts, caps, &c, for a
propitious journey; but
proceeded." Following the old
canoe route, Georgian Bay and
Lake Superior were soon passed
over, though on the latter lake
the expedition was delayed about
a week by the ice, and here too
Sir George met the sad news of
the unfortunate death of his
kinsman, Thomas Simpson, of whom
we shall speak more fully in
connection with Arctic
exploration. Taking the route
from Fort William by
Kaministiquia, the travellers
hastened over the course by way
of Rainy Lake and River and Lake
of the Woods. In referring to
Rainy River the somewhat
inflated style of the editor
makes Sir George speak without
the caution which every fur
trader was directed to cultivate
in revealing the resources of
the fur country. A decade
afterwards Mr. Roebuck, before
the Committee of the House of
Commons, "heckled" Sir George
over this fulsome passage. The
passage is: "From the very brink
of the river (Rainy River) there
rises a gentle slope of
greenwood, crowned in many
places with a plentiful growth
of birch, poplar, beech, elm,
and oak. Is it too much for the
eye of philanthropy to discern,
through the vista of futurity,
this noble stream, connecting,
as it does, the fertile shores
of two spacious lakes, with
crowded steamboats on its bosom
and populous towns on its
borders?"
Following
the usual route by River
Winnipeg, Lake Winnipeg, and Red
River, Fort Garry was soon
reached, and here the Governor
somewhat changed his plans. He
determined to cross the prairies
by light conveyances, and
accordingly on July 3rd, at five
in the morning, with his fellow-travellers,
with only six men, three horses,
and one light cart, the Emperor
of the Plains left Fort Garry
under a salute and with the
shouting of the spectators, as
he started on his journey to
skirt the winding Assiniboine
River.
A thousand
miles over the prairie in July
is one of the most cheery and
delightsome Journeys that can be
made. The prairie flowers
abound, their colours have not
yet taken on the full blaze of
yellow to bo seen a month later,
and the mosquitoes have largely
passed away on the prairies. The
weather, though somewhat warm,
is very rarely oppressive on the
plains, where a breeze may
always be felt. This long
journey the party made with most
reckless speed—doing it in three
weeks, and arriving at Edmonton
House, to be received by the
firing of guns and the presence
of nine native chiefs of the
Blackfeet, Piegans, Sarcees, and
Bloods, dressed in their
grandest clothes and decorated
with scalp locks. "They implored
me," says the Governor, "to
grant their horses might always
be swift, that the buffalo might
instantly abound, and that their
wives might live long and look
young."
Four days
sufficed at Edmonton on the
North Saskatchewan to provide
the travellers with forty-five
fresh horses. They speedily
passed up the Saskatchewan
River, meeting bands of hostile
Sarcees, using supplies of
pemmican, and soon catching
their first view of the white
peaks of the Rocky Mountains.
Deep muskegs and dense jungles
were often encountered, but all
were overcome by the skill and
energy of the expert fur trader
Row and their guide. Through
clouds of mosquitoes they
advanced until the sublime
mountain scenery was beheld
whenever it was not obscured
with the smoke arising from the
fires through this region, which
was suffering from a very dry
season. At length Fort Colville,
on the Columbia River, was
gained after nearly one thousand
miles from Edmonton ; and this
journey, much of it mountain
travelling, had averaged forty
miles a day. The party from Fort
Garry had been travelling
constantly for six weeks and
five days, and they had averaged
eleven and a half hours a day in
the saddle. The weather had been
charming, with a steady
cloudless sky, the winds were
light, the nights cool, and the
only thing to be lamented was
the appearance of the whole
party, who, with tattered
garments and crownless hats,
entered the fort.
Embarking
below the Chaudiere Falls of the
Columbia, the company took
boats, worked by six oars each,
and the Mater being high they
were able to make one hundred,
and even more miles a day, in
due course reaching Fort
Vancouver.
At Fort
Vancouver Governor Simpson met
Trader Douglas —afterward Sir
James Douglas. He accompanied
the party, which now took horses
and crossed country by a four
days' journey to Fort Nisqually.
Here on the shore of Puget Sound
lay the ship Beaver, and
embarking on her the party went
on their journey to Sitka, the
chief place in Alaska, whence
the Governor exchanged dignified
courtesies with the Russian
Governor Etholin, and enjoyed
the hospitality of his "pretty
and lady-like" wife. In
addition, Governor Simpson
examined into the Company's
operations (the Hudson's Bay
Company had obtained exclusive
licence of this sleepy Alaska
for twenty years longer), and
found the trade to be 10,000 fur
seals, 1000 sea otters, 12,000
beaver, 2500 land
otters,------foxes and martins,
20,000 sea-horse teeth.
The return
journey was made, the Beaver
calling, as she came down the
coast, at Forts Stikine,
Simpson, and McLoughlin. In due
course Fort Vancouver was
reached again. Sir George's
journey to San Francisco, thence
to Sandwich Islands, again
direct to Alaska, and then
westward to Siberia, and over
the long journey through Siberia
on to St. Petersburg, we have no
special need to describe in
connection with our subject. The
great traveller reached Britain,
having journeyed round the globe
in the manner we have seen, in
nineteen months and twenty-six
days.
Enough has
been shown of Sir George's
career, his administration,
method of travel, and
management, to bring before us
the character of the man. At
times he was accompanied on his
voyages to more accessible
points by Lady Simpson, and her
name is seen in the post of Fort
Frances on Rainy River and in
Lake Frances on the upper waters
of the Liard River, discovered
and named by Chief Factor Robert
Campbell. Sir George lived at
Lachine, near Montreal, where so
many retired Hudson's Bay
Company men have spent the
sunset of their days. He took an
interest in business projects in
Montreal, held stock at one time
in the Allan Line of steamships,
and was regarded as a leader in
business and affairs in
Montreal. He passed away in
1860. Sir E. W. Watkin, in his
work, "Recollections of Canada
and the States," gives a letter
from Governor Dallas, who
succeeded Sir George, in which
reference is made to "the late
Sir George Simpson, who for a
number of years past lived at
his ease at Lachine, and
attended more apparently to his
own affairs than to those of the
Company." Whether this is a true
statement, or simply the biassed
view of Dallas, who was rather
rash and inconsiderate, it is
hard for us to decide.
Governor
Simpson lifted the fur trade out
of the depth into which it had
fallen, harmonised the hostile
elements of the two Companies,
reduced order out of chaos in
the interior, helped, as we
shall see, various expeditions
for the exploration of Rupert's
Land, and though, as tradition
goes and as his journey around
the world shows, he never
escaped from the witchery of a
pretty face, yet the business
concerns of the Company were
certainly such as to gain the
approbation of the financial
world.