Fascination of an
unknown land—Adventure,
science, or gain—
Lieutenant Lefroy's
magnetic survey—Hudson's
Bay Company
assists—Winters at Fort
Chipewyan—First
scientific visit to
Peace River—Notes
lost—Not "gratuitous
canoe conveyancen
—Captain Palliser and
Lieutenant
Hector—Journey through
Rupert's Land—Rocky
Mountain passes—On to
the coast—A successful
expedition—Hind and
Dawson—To spy out the
land for Canada—The
fertile belt—Hind's
description good—Milton
and Cheadle—Winter on
the Saskatchewan—Reach
Pacific Ocean in a
pitiable
condition—Captain
Butler—The horse Blaeie
and dog "Cerf Vola"—Fleming
and Grant—"Ocean to
ocean"— "Land fitted for
a healthy and hardy
race"—Waggon road and
railway.
The vast
area of Rupert's Land
and the adjoining Indian
territories have always
had a fascination for
the British imagination
; and not alone its wide
extent, but its being a
fur traders' paradise,
and in consequence
largely a "terra
incognita," has led
adventurous spirits to
desire to explore it.
Just as Sir John
Mandeville's expedition
to the unknown regions
of Asia in the
fourteenth century has
appealed to the hardy
and brave sons of
Britain from that early
day ; and in later times
the famous ride of
Colonel Burnaby to Khiva
in our own generation
has led Central Asia to
be viewed as a land of
mystery ; so the plains
of Rupert's Land, with
the reputed Chinese wall
thrown around them by
the Hudson's Bay
Company's monopoly, have
been a favourite resort
for the traveller, the
mighty hunter, and the
scientist.
It is true
no succeeding records of
adventure can have the
interest for us that
gathers around those of
the intrepid Verendrye,
the mysterious Hearne,
or the heroic Alexander
Mackenzie, whose
journeys we have already
described, yet many
daring adventurers who
have gone on scientific
or exploratory
expeditions, or who have
travelled the wide
expanse for sport or for
mere curiosity, may
claim our attention.
LEFROY'S MAGNETIC SURVEY
The discovery of the
magnetic pole by Sir
John Ross, and the
continued interest in
the problems connected
with the Arctic Sea, the
romance of the North
land, and the dream of a
North-West Passage, led
to the desire to have a
scientific survey of the
wide expanse of Rupert's
Land. The matter was
brought to the notice of
the Royal Society by
Major, afterwards
General Sir Edward
Sabine, a noted student
of magnetism. Sir John
Herschell, the leading
light on the subject of
physics, succeeded in
inducing the Society to
pronounce a favourable
opinion on the project,
and the strong influence
of the Royal Society,
under the presidency of
the Marquis of
Northampton, induced the
Lords of the Treasury to
meet the estimated
expenses, nine hundred
and ten pounds, with the
understanding that, as
stated by the President,
gratuitous canoe
conveyance would be
provided by the Hudson's
Bay Company in the
territories belonging to
them.
Lieutenant, afterwards
General Sir Henry Lefroy,
a young artillery
officer, was selected to
go upon the journey. A
circu lar letter was
sent to the Hudson's Bay
Company posts by
Governor Simpson,
directing that every
assistance should be
given to the survey.
Lefroy, having wintered
in Montreal, was given a
passage on May 1st,
1842, on the canoes for
the North-West. Passing
up the Ottawa and along
the fur traders' route,
he soon reached Sault
Ste. Marie and Fort
William; magnetic
observations, accurate
observations of latitude
and longitude being made
at the Hudson's Bay
Company posts along the
route. Kakabeka Falls
and the various points
along the Kaministiquia
route were examined, and
exchanging the "canot de
maitre" for the "canot
de Nord," by way of Lake
of the Woods and Lake
Winnipeg, the observer
arrived at Fort Garry on
June 29th, having found
Sir George Simpson at
Lower Fort Garry.
After a close
examination of the Red
River Valley and some
geological observations
on the west side of Lake
Winnipeg, Lefroy made
his way to Norway House,
and then by the
watercourses, four
hundred miles, to York
Factory. Having done
good work on the Bay, he
made the return journey
to Norway House, and on
August 22nd, Cumberland
House on the
Saskatchewan was gained.
Here he adopted the
latitude and longitude
taken by Franklin's two
land expeditions, and
here took seven
independent observations
of variation and dip of
the magnetic needle.
Now striking
energetically northward,
and stopping long enough
at the posts to take the
necessary observations,
the explorer arrived at
Fort Chipewyan on
September 23rd. It was
twelve years since the
dwellers on Lake
Athabasca had been
visited by any traveller
from the south, and
Lefroy's voyageurs, as
they completed their
three thousand miles of
Journey, decked out in
their best apparel, made
the echoes of the lake
resound with their gay
chansons. Lefroy
wintered in the fort,
where the winter months
were enjoyed in the
well-selected library of
the Company and the new
experiences of the fur
trader's life, while his
voyageurs went away to
support themselves at a
fishing station on the
lake.
The summer of 1843 was
spent in a round of
thirteen hundred and
forty miles, going from
Lake Athabasca, up the
Peace River to Fort
Dunvegan, then by way of
Lower Slave Lake to
Edmonton, and down the
Saskatchewan to
Cumberland. Lefroy
claims that no
scientific traveller had
visited the Peace River
since the time of
Alexander Mackenzie,
fifty-five years before.
Unfortunately, Lefroy's
notes of this Journey
and some of his best
observations were lost
in his return through
the United States, and
could not be replaced.
In March, 1844,
Lieutenant Lefroy left
Lake Athabasca, and
travelled on snow shoes
to Fort Resolution on
Great Slave Lake, and
thence to Fort Simpson,
four hundred and fifty
miles, having his
instruments for
observation borne on dog
sleds. This Journey was
made in nineteen days.
Waiting at the Fort till
May, he accomplished the
descent of the Mackenzie
River after the breaking
up of the ice, and
reached Fort Good Hope.
The return Journey to
Fort Resolution was made
at a very rapid rate,
and the route thence to
Lake Athabasca was
followed. The diary ends
June 30th, 1844.
At the close of the
expedition some
misunderstanding arose
as to the settlement of
the accounts. The
Hudson's Bay Company had
promised to give
"gratuitous canoe
conveyance." The
original plan of the
journey was, however,
much changed, and
Lieutenant Lefroy was a
much greater expense to
the Company than had
been expected. A bill of
upwards of twelve
hundred pounds was
rendered by the Hudson's
Bay Company to the Royal
Society. After certain
explanations and
negotiations a
compromise of eight
hundred and fifty pounds
was agreed on, and this
was paid by the Treasury
Department to the
Company.
The work done by
Lieutenant Lefroy was of
the most accurate and
valuable kind. His name
is remembered as that of
one of the most
trustworthy of the
explorers of the plains
of Rupert's Land and the
North, and is
commemorated by Fort
Lefroy in the Rocky
Mountains. It is true
his evidence, recorded
in the Blue Book of
1857, was somewhat
disappointing, but his
errors were those of
judgment, not of
prejudice or intention.
PALLISER AND HECTOR.
The approach of the time
when the twenty-one
years' lease of the
Indian territories
granted by the Imperial
Parliament to the
Hudson's Bay Company was
drawing near a close in
1857, when the Committee
of the House of Commons
met in February of this
year to consider the
matter. A vast mass of
evidence was taken, and
the consideration of the
Blue Book containing
this will afford us
material for a very
interesting chapter. The
interest in the matter,
and the necessity for
obtaining expert
information, led the
Imperial Government to
organize an expedition
under Captain John
Palliser, R.N.A., of the
Royal Engineers. With
Captain Palliser, who
was to go up the
Canadian lakes to the
interior, was associated
Lieutenant Blakiston,
R.N., who received
orders to proceed by
ship to York Factory and
meet the main expedition
at some point in
Rupert's Land. The
geologist of the
expedition was James
Hector, M.D. (Edin.). J.
W. Sullivan was
secretary and M. E.
Bourgeau, botanist.
After the usual
incidents of an ocean
voyage, some difficulty
with the Customs
authorities in New York
arose as to the entry of
astronomical
instruments, which was
happily overcome, and
after a long Journey by
way of Detroit, Sault
Ste. Marie was reached,
where Palliser found two
birch bark canoes and
sixteen voyageurs
awaiting him, as
provided by the Hudson's
Bay Company. Sir George
Simpson had lately
passed this point.
Journeying along the fur
traders' route, the
explorers found
themselves expected at
Fort Frances, on Rainy
River.
Here a deputation of
Indians waited upon
them, and the old chief
discoursed thus: "I do
not ask for presents,
although I am poor and
my people are hungry,
but I know you have come
straight from the Great
Country, and we know
that no men from that
country ever came to us
and lied. I want you to
declare to us truthfully
what the Great Queen of
your country intends to
do to us when she will
take the country from
the fur company's
people. All around me I
see the smoke of the
white men to rise. The
'Long Knives' (the
Americans) are trading
with our neighbours for
their lands and they are
cheating them and
deceiving them. Now, we
will not sell nor part
with our lands."
Having reached Fort
Garry, Captain Palliser
divided his party,
sending one section
west, and himself going
south to the boundary
line with the other.
Going west from Pembina,
Palliser reached the
French half-breed
settlement of St. Joseph
(St. Jo.), and some days
afterwards Turtle
Mountain. Thence he
hurried across country
to Fort Ellice to meet
the other portion of his
expedition.
While the tired horses
rested here he made an
excursion of a notable
kind to the South-West.
This was to the "Roches
Percées" on the Souris
River. This is a famous
spot, noted for the
presence of Tertiary
sandstone exposures,
which have weathered
into the most fantastic
shapes. It is a sacred
spot of the Indians.
Here, as at the "Red
Pipestone Quarry,"
described by Longfellow,
and not more than one
hundred and fifty miles
distant from it, Sioux,
Assiniboines, and Crees
meet in peace. Though
war may prevail
elsewhere, this spot is
by mutual agreement kept
as neutral. At this
point Palliser saw a
great camp of
Assiniboines.
Returning from this side
excursion, the Captain
resumed his command, and
having obtained McKay,
the Hudson's Bay Company
officer at Fort Ellice,
with Governor Christie's
permission, set off by
way of Qu'Appelle Lakes
for the elbow of the
Saskatchewan.
On the South
Saskatchewan Palliser
came to the "heart of
the buffalo country."
The whole region as far
as the eye could reach
was covered with the
buffalo in bands varying
from hundreds to
thousands. So vast were
the herds, that he began
to have serious
apprehensions for his
horses, as "the grass
was eaten to the earth,
as if the place had been
devastated by locusts."
Crossing the
Saskatchewan the
explorers went northward
to Fort Carlton on the
north branch, where the
party wintered while
Captain Palliser
returned to Canada,
paying 65/. to a Red
River trader to drive
him five hundred and
twenty miles from Fort
Garry to Crow Wing, the
nearest Minnesota
settlement. Palliser's
horse, for which he had
bargained, was killed at
Pembina, and he walked
the four hundred and
fifty miles of the
journey, which was made
with painful slowness by
the struggling horses
and sleds of the
traders.
In June of the following
year Palliser left Fort
Carlton, part of his
command going to the Red
Deer River, the other
part to visit Fort Pitt
and Edmonton House. From
Edmonton the explorer
reports that during the
summer, his men had
succeeded in finding a
pass through the Rocky
Mountains, one not only
practicable for horses,
but which, with but
little expense, could be
rendered available for
carts also.
He also states the
passes discovered by him
to be:—
(1) Kananaskis Pass and
Vermilion Pass;
(2)
Lake Pass and Beaver
Foot Pass;
(3) Little
Fork Pass;
(4)
Kicking Horse Pass—six
in all, which, with the
North Kootenay (on
British territory), make
up seven known passes.
Having wintered at
Edmonton, he satisfied
himself that this region
so far north and west is
a good agricultural
region, that the
Saskatchewan region
compares favourably with
that of the Red River
Valley, that the rule of
the country should be
given over by the
Hudson's Bay Company to
the general Government,
and that a railway could
be built easily from the
Red River to the eastern
foot of the Rocky
Mountains.
Orders having reached
Palliser to proceed, he
undertook, in the summer
of 1859, a journey
across the Rocky
Mountains, following in
part the old Hudson's
Bay Company trail. On
St. Andrew's Day, the
party arrived at the
Hudson's Bay Company
post at Vancouver on the
Columbia, and was
welcomed by Mr. Graham,
the officer in charge.
Taking steamer down the
Columbia with his
assistant Sullivan,
Captain Palliser went to
Victoria, a Hudson's Bay
Company establishment on
Vancouver Island,
whither they were
followed by Dr. Hector.
Journeying south-west to
San Francisco, he
returned, via Isthmus of
Panama, to New York and
England.
The expedition was one
of the best organized,
best managed, and most
successful that visited
Rupert's Land. The
report is a sensible,
well-balanced, minute,
and reliable account of
the country passed over.
HIND AND DAWSON'S
EXPLORATION
In the same year that
Palliser's expedition
was despatched by the
British Government to
examine the resources
and characteristics of
Rupert's Land, a party
was sent by the Canadian
Government with similar
ends in view, but more
especially to examine
the routes and means of
access by which the
prairies of the
North-West might be
reached from Lake
Superior.
The staff of the party
was as follows: George
Gladman, director;
Professor Henry Youle
Hind, geologist; W. H.
E. Napier, engineer; S.
J. Dawson, surveyor.
These, along with
several foremen, twelve
Caughnawaga Iroquois,
from near Lachine, and
twelve Ojibeway Indians
from Fort William, made
up a stirring canoe
party of forty-four
persons.
In July, 1857, the
expedition left Toronto,
went by land to
Collingwood on Lake
Huron, embarked there on
the steamer Collingwood,
and passing by Sault St.
Marie, reached on August
1st Fort William at the
mouth of the
Kaministiquia. Mr. John
McIntyre, the officer of
the Hudson's Bay Company
in charge of Fort
William, has given to
the writer an account of
the arrival of the party
there with their great
supply canoes, trading
outfit, and apparatus,
piled up high on the
steamer's deck—a great
contrast to the scanty
but probably more
efficient means of
transport found on a
Hudson's Bay Company
trading journey. The
party in due time went
forward over the usual
fur traders' route,
which we have so often
described, and arrived
at Fort Garry early in
September.
As the object of the
expedition was to spy
out the land, the Red
River settlement, now
grown to considerable
size, afforded the
explorers an interesting
field for study. Simple
though the conditions of
life were, yet the fact
that six or seven
thousands of human
beings were gaining a
livelihood and were
possessed of a number of
the amenities of life,
made its impress on the
visitors, and Hind's
chapters VI. to X. of
his first volume are
taken up with a general
account of the
settlement, the banks of
the Red River,
statistics of
population,
administration of
justice, trade,
occupations of the
people, missions,
education, and
agriculture at Red
River.
Having arrived at the
settlement, the leaders
devised plans for
overtaking their work.
The approach of winter
made it impossible to
plan expeditions over
the plains to any
profit. Mr. Gladman
returned by canoE to
Lake Superior early in
September, Napier and
his assistants took up
their abode among the
better class of
English-speaking
half-breeds between the
upper and lower forts on
the banks of the Red
River. Mr. Dawson found
shelter among his Roman
Catholic co-religionists
half a mile from Fort
Garry. Ho and his party
were to be engaged
during the winter
between Red River and
the Lake of the Woods,
along the route
afterwards called the
Dawson Road, while Hind
followed his party up
the western bank of Red
River to Pembina, and
his own account is that
there was of them "all
told, five gentlemen,
five half-breeds, six
saddle horses, and five
carts, to which were
respectively attached
four poor horses and one
refractory mule."
This party was returning
to Canada, going by way
of Crow Wing, thence by
stage coach to St. Paul,
on the Mississippi, then
by rail unbroken to
Toronto, which was
reached after an absence
of three and a half
months.
The next season Hind was
placed in charge of the
expedition, and with new
assistants went up the
lakes in May, leading
them by the
long-deserted route of
Grand Portage instead of
by Kaministiquia. The
journey from Lake
Superior to Fort Garry
was made in about
twenty-one days. On
their arrival at Red
River the party found
that Mr. Dawson had gone
on an exploring tour to
the Saskatchewan. Having
organized his expedition
Hind now went up the
Assiniboine to Fort
Ellice. The Qu'Appelle
Valley was then
explored, and the lake
reached from which two
streamlets flow, one
into the Qu'Appelle and
thence to the
Assiniboine, the other
into the Saskatchewan.
Descending the
Saskatchewan, at the
mouth of which the Grand
Rapids impressed the
party, they made the
journey thence up Lake
Winnipeg and Red River
to the place of
departure. The tour was
a most interesting one,
having occupied all the
summer. Hind was a close
observer, was most
skilful in working with
the Hudson's Bay Company
and its officers, and he
gained an excellent view
of the most fertile
parts of the country.
His estimate of it on
the whole has been
wonderfully borne out by
succeeding years of
experience and
investigation.
MILTON AND CHEADLE.
The world at large,
after Hind's expedition
and the publication of
his interesting
observations, began to
know more of the fur
traders' land and showed
more interest in it. In
the years succeeding
Hind's expedition a
number of enterprising
Canadians reached Fort
Garry by way of St.
Paul, Minn., and took up
their abode in the
country. A daring band
of nearly 200 Canadians,
drawn by the gold fever,
started in 1862, on an
overland journey to
Cariboo; but many of
them perished by the
way. Three other
well-known expeditions
deserve notice.
The first of these was
in 1862 by Viscount
Milton and Dr. Cheadle.
Coming from England by
way of Minnesota to Fort
Garry, they stopped at
Red River settlement,
and by conveyance
crossed the prairies in
their first season as
far as Fort Carlton on
the North Saskatchewan,
and wintered there. The
season was enjoyable,
and in spring the
explorers ascended the
Saskatchewan to
Edmonton, and then, by
way of the Yellow Head
Pass, crossed the Rocky
Mountains. Their descent
down the Thompson River
was a most difficult
one. The explorers were
nearly lost through
starvation, and on their
arrival by way of Fraser
River at Victoria their
appearance was most
distressing and their
condition most pitiable.
A few years ago, in
company with a party of
members of the British
Association, Dr. Cheadle
visited Winnipeg, and at
a banquet in the city
expressed to the writer
his surprise that the
former state of scarcity
of food even on Red
River had been so
changed into the evident
plenty which Manitoba
now enjoys. Milton and
Cheadle's "The
North-West Passage by
Land" is a most
enjoyable book.
CAPTAIN BUTLER.
In the early months of
the year 1870, when Red
River -settlement was
under the hand of the
rebel Louis Riel, a
tall,
distinguished-looking
stranger descended the
Red River in the steamer
International. News had
been sent by a courier
on horseback to the
rebel chief that a
dangerous stranger was
approaching. The
stalwart Irish visitor
was Captain W. F.
Butler, of H.M. 69th
Regiment of Foot. As the
International neared
Fort Garry, Butler, with
a well-known resident of
Red River settlement,
sprang upon the
river-bank from the
steamer in the dark as
she turned into the
Assiniboine River.
He escaped to the lower
part of the settlement,
but the knowledge that
he had a letter from the
Roman Catholic
Archbishop Tach6 led to
the rebel chief sending
for and promising him a
safe-conduct. Butler
came and inspected the
fort, and again departed
to Lake Winnipeg, River
Winnipeg, and Lake of
the Woods, where he
accomplished his real
mission, in telling to
General Wolseley, of the
relief expedition coming
to drive away the
rebels, the state of
matters in the Red
River.
Captain Butler then went
west, crossed country to
the Saskatchewan,
descended the river, and
in winter came through,
by snow-shoe and dog
train, over Lakes
Winnipegoosis and
Manitoba to the east,
and then to Europe.
Love of adventure
brought Captain Butler
back to the North-West.
In 1872 he journeyed
through the former fur
traders' land, reaching
Lake Athabasca in March,
1873. Ascending the
Peace River, he arrived
in Northern British
Columbia in May. Through
three hundred and fifty
miles of the dense
forests of New Caledonia
he toiled to reach
Quesnel, on the Fraser,
four hundred miles north
of Victoria, British
Columbia, where he in
due time landed.
Captain Butler has left
a graphic, perhaps
somewhat embellished,
account of his travels
in the books, "Great
Lone Land" and "Wild
North Land." The central
figure of his first book
is the faithful horse
"Blackie" and of the
second the Eskimo dog
"Cerf-Vola." The
appreciative reader
feels, however,
especially in the
latter, the spirit and
power of Milton's and
Cheadle's "North-West
Passage by Land"
everywhere in these
descriptive works.
FLEMING AND GRANT.
Third of these
expeditions was that
undertaken in 1872,
under the leadership of
Sandford Fleming, which
has been chronicled in
the work "Ocean
to Ocean," by Rev.
Principal Grant. The
writer saw this
expedition at Winnipeg
in the summer of its
arrival. It came for the
purpose of crossing the
plains, as a preliminary
survey for a railway.
The party came up the
lakes, and by boat and
portage over the
traders' route, and the
Dawson Road from Lake of
the Woods to Red River,
and halted near Fort
Garry. Going westward,
they for the most part
followed the path of
Milton and Cheadle. Fort
Carlton and then
Edmonton House were
reached, and the Yellow
Head Pass was followed
to the North Thompson
River. The forks of the
river at Kamloops were
passed, and then the
canoe way down the
Fraser to the sea was
taken. The return
journey was made by way
of San Francisco. The
expedition did much to
open the way for
Canadian emigration and
to keep before the minds
of Canadians the
necessity for a waggon
road across the Rocky
Mountains and for a
railway from ocean to
ocean as soon as
possible. Dr. Grant's
conclusion was: "We know
that we have a great
North-West, a country
like old Canada—not
suited for lotus-eaters
to live in, but fitted
to rear a healthy and
hardy race."