The Company's Indian policy—Character of officers—A race of hunters
—Plan of advances—Charges against the Company—Liquor
restriction—Capital punishment—Starving Indians—Diseased and
helpless—Education and religion—The age of missions— Sturdy Saulteaux—The
Muskegons—Wood Crees—Wandering Plain Crees—The Chipewyans—Wild
Assiniboines—Blackfeet Indians—Polyglot coast tribes—Eskimos—No Indian
war—No police—Pliable and docile—Success of the Company.
From time to time the opponents of the Company
have sought to find grounds for the overthrow of the licence to trade
granted by the Government of Britain over the Indian territories. One
of the most frequent lines of attack was in regard to the treatment of
the Indians by the fur traders. It may bo readily conceded that the
ideal of the Company's officials was in many cases not the highest.
The aim of Governor Simpson in his long reign of forty years was that
of a keen trader. A politic man, the leader of the traders when in
Montreal conformed to the sentiment of the city, abroad in the wilds
he did very little to encourage his subordinates to cultivate higher
aims among the natives. Often the missionary was found raising
questions very disturbing to the monopoly, and this brought the
Company officers into a hostile attitude to him. Undoubtedly in some
cases the missionaries were officious and unfair in their criticisms.
But, on the other hand, the men and officers of
the Company were generally moral. Men of education and reading the
officers usually were, and their sentiment was likely to be in the
right direction. The spirit of the monopoly—the golden character of
silence, and the need of being secretive and uncommunicative—was
instilled into every clerk, trapper, and trader.
But the tradition of the Company was to keep the
Indian a hunter. There was no effort to encourage the native to
agriculture or to any industry. To make a good collector of fur was
the chief aim. For this the Indian required no education, for this the
wandering habit needed to be cultivated rather than discouraged, and
for this it was well to have the home ties as brittle as possible.
Hence the tent and teepee were favoured for the Indian hunter more
than the log cottage or village house.
It was one of the most common charges against the
Company that in order to keep the Indian in subjection advances were
made on the catch of furs of the coming season, in order that, being
in debt, he might be less independent. The experience of the writer in
Red River settlement in former days leads him to doubt this, and
certainly the fur traders deny the allegation. The improvident or
half-breed Indian went to the Company's store to obtain all that he
could. The traders at the forts had difficulty in checking the
extravagance of their wards. Frequently the storekeeper refused to
make advances lost he should fail in recovering the value of the
articles advanced. Fitzgerald, a writer who took part in the agitation
of 1849, makes the assertion in the most flippant manner that to keep
the Indians in debt was the invariable policy of the Company. No
evidence is cited to support this statement, and it would seem to be
very hard to prove.
The same writer undertakes, along the line of
destructive criticism, to show that the Hudson's Bay Company does not
deserve the credit given it of discouraging the traffic in strong
drink, and asserts that "a beaver skin was never lost to the Company
for want of a pint of rum." This is a very grave charge, and in the
opinion of the writer cannot be substantiated. The Bishop of Montreal,
R. M. Ballantyne, and the agents of the missionary societies are said
either to have little experience or to be unwilling to tell on this
subject what they knew. This critic then quotes various statements of
writers, extending back in some cases thirty or forty years, to show
that spirituous liquors were sold by the Company. It is undoubted that
at times in the history of the fur trade, especially at the beginning
of the century, when the three Companies were engaged in a most
exacting competition, as we have fully shown, in several cases much
damage was done. On the Pacific Coast, too, eight or ten years before
this critic wrote, there was, as we have seen, excess. At other times,
also, at points in the wide field of operations, over half a
continent, intoxicating liquor was plentiful and very injurious, but
no feeling was stronger in a Hudson's Bay Company trader's mind than
that he was in a country without police, without military, without
laws, and that his own and his people's lives were in danger should
drunkenness prevail. Self-preservation inclined every trader to
prevent the use of spirits among the Indians. The writer is of opinion
that while there may have been many violations of sobriety, yet the
record of the Hudson's Bay Company has been on the whole creditable in
this matter.
The charges of executing capital punishment and
of neg lecting the Indians in years of starvation may be taken
together. The criticism of the people of Red River was that the
Company was weak in the execution of the penalties of the law. They
complained that the Company was uncertain of its powers and that the
hand of justice was chained. The marvel to an unprejudiced observer is
that the Company succeeded in ruling so vast a territory with so few
reprisals or executions. In the matter of assisting the Indians in
years of scarcity, it was the interest of the fur company to save the
lives of its trappers and workers. But those unacquainted with the
vast wastes of Rupert's Land and the Far North little know the
difficulties of at times obtaining food. The readers of Milton and
Cheadle's graphic story or our account of Robert Campbell's adventures
on the Stikine, know the hardships and the near approach to starvation
of these travellers. Dr. Cheadle, on a visit to Winnipeg a few years
ago, said to the writer that on his first visit the greatest
difficulty his party had was to secure supplies. There are years in
which game and fish are so scarce that in remote northern districts
death is inevitable for many. The conditions make it impossible for
the Company to save the lives of the natives. Relief for the diseased
and aged is at times hard to obtain. Small-pox and other epidemics
have the most deadly effect upon the semi-civilized people of the
far-off hunter's territory.
The charge made up to 1849 that the Hudson's Bay
Company had done little for the education and religious training of
the Indians was probably true enough. Outside of Red River and British
Columbia they did not sufficiently realize their responsibility as a
company. Since that time, with the approval and co-operation in many
ways of the Company, the various missionary societies have grappled
with the problem. The Indians about Hudson Bay, on Lake Winnipeg, in
the Mackenzie River, throughout British Columbia, and on the great
prairies of Assiniboia, are to-day largely Christianized and receiving
education.
The Saulteaux, or Indians who formerly lived at
Sault Ste. Marie, but wandered west along the shore of Lake Superior
and even up to Lake Winnipeg, are a branch of the Algonquin 0jibeways.
Hardy and persevering, most conservative in preserving old customs,
hard to influence by religious ideas, they have been pensioners of the
Hudson's Bay Company, but their country is very barren, and they have
advanced but little.
Very interesting, among their relations of
Algonquin origin, are the Muskegons, or Swampy Crees, who have long
occupied the region around Hudson Bay and have extended inland to Lake
Winnipeg. Docile and peaceful, they have been largely influenced by
Christianity. Under missionary and Company guidance they have gathered
around the posts, and find a living on the game of the country and in
trapping the wild animals.
Related to the Muskegons are the Wood Crees, who
live along the rivers and on the belts of wood which skirt lakes and
hills. They cling to the birch-bark wigwam, use the bark canoe, and
are nomadic in habit. They may be called the gipsies of the West, and
being in scattered families have boon little reached by better
influences.
Another branch of the Algonquin stock is the
Plain Crees. These Indians are a most adventurous and energetic
people. Leaving behind their canoes and Huskie dogs, they obtained
horses and cayuses and hied them over the prairies. Birch-bark being
unobtainable, they made their tents, better fitted for protecting them
from the searching winds of the prairies and the cold of winter, from
tanned skins of the buffalo and moose-deer. For seven hundred miles
from the mouth of the Saskatchewan they extend to the foot hills of
the Rocky Mountains. Meeting in their great camps, seemingly
untameable as a race of plain hunters, they were, up to the time of
the transfer to Canada, almost untouched by missionary influence, but
in the last thirty years they have been placed on reserves by the
Canadian Government and are in almost all cases yielding to
Christianizing agencies.
North of the country of the Crees live tribes
with very wide connections. They call themselves "Tinné" or "People,"
but to others they are known as Chipewyans, or Athabascans. They seem
to be less copper-coloured than the other Indians, and are docile in
disposition. This nation stretches from Fort Churchill, on Hudson Bay,
along the English River, up to Lake Athabasca, along the Peace River
into the very heart of the Rocky Mountains, and even beyond to the
coast. They have proved teachable and yield to ameliorating
influences.
Probably the oldest and best known name of the
interior of Rupert's Land, the name after which Lord Selkirk called
his Colony of Assiniboia, is that belonging to the Wild Assiniboines
or Stony River Sioux. The river at the mouth of which stands the city
of Winnipeg was their northern boundary, and they extended southward
toward the great Indian confederacy of the Sioux natives or Dakotas,
of which indeed they were at one time a branch. Tall, handsome, with
firmly formed faces, agile and revengeful, they are an intelligent and
capable race. These Indians, known familiarly as the "Stonies," have
greatly diminished in numbers since the time of Alexander Henry, jun.,
who describes them fully. In later years they have been cut down with
pulmonary and other diseases, and are to-day but the fragment of a
great tribe. They have long been friendly with the Plain Crees, but
are not very open to Christianity, though there are one or two small
communities which are exceptions in this respect.
Very little under Hudson's Bay Company control
were the Blackfoot nation, along the foot hills of the Rocky
Mountains, ear the national boundary. Ethnically they are related to
the Crees, but they have always been difficult to approach. Living in
large camps during Hudson's Bay Company days, they spent a wild,
happy, comfortable life among the herds of wandering buffalo of their
district. Since the beginning of the Canadian r6gime they have become
more susceptible to civilizing agencies, and live in great reserves in
the south-west of their old hunting grounds.
A perfect chaos of races meets us among the
Indians of British Columbia and Alaska, and their language is
polyglot. Seemingly the result of innumerable immigrations from
Malayan and Mongolian sources in Asia, they have come at different
times. One of the best known tribes of the coast is the Haidas,
numbering some six thousand souls. The Nutka Indians occupy Vancouver
Island, and have many tribal divisions. To the Selish or Flatheads
belong many of the tribes of the Lower Fraser River, while the
Shushwaps hold the country on the Columbia and Okanagan Rivers.
Mention has been made already of the small but influential tribe of
Chinooks near the mouth of the Columbia River.
While differing in many ways from each other, the
Indians of the Pacific Coast have always been turbulent and excitable.
From first to last more murders and riots have taken place among them
than throughout all the vast territory held by the Hudson's Bay
Company east of the Rocky Mountains. While missionary zeal has
accomplished much among the Western Coast Indians, yet the "bad
Indian" element has been a recognized and appreciable quantity among
them so far as the Company is concerned.
Last among the natives who have been under
Hudson's Bay Company influence are the Eskimos or Innuits of the Far
North. They are found on the Labrador Coast, on Coppermine River, on
the shore of the Arctic Sea, and on the Alaskan peninsula. Dressed in
sealskin clothing and dwelling in huts of snow, hastening from place
to place in their sledges drawn by wolf-like dogs called "Eskies" or
"Huskies," these people have found themselves comparatively
independent of Hudson's Bay Company assistance. Living largely on the
products of the sea, they have shown great ingenuity in manufacturing
articles and implements for themselves. The usual experience of the
Company from Ungava, through the Mackenzie River posts, and the
trading houses in Alaska has been that they were starved out and were
compelled to give up their trading houses among them. Little has been
done, unless in the Yukon country, to evangelize the Eskimos.
The marvel to the historian, as he surveys the
two centuries and a quarter of the history of the Hudson's Bay
Company, is their successful management of the Indian tribes. There
has never been an Indian war in Rupert's Land or the Indian
territories—nothing beyond a temporary emeute or incidental outbreak.
Thousands of miles from the nearest British garrison or soldier, trade
has been carried on in scores and scores of forts and factories with
perfect confidence. The Indians have always respected the "Kingchauch
man." He was to them the representative of superior ability and
financial strength, but more than this, he was the embodiment of
civilization and of fair and just dealing. High prices may have been
imposed on the Indians, but the Company's expenses were enormous.
There are points among the most remote trading posts from which the
returns in money were not possible in less than nine years from the
time the goods left the Fenchurch Street or Lime Street warehouses.
With all his keen bargaining and his so-called exacting motto, "Pro
pelle cutem," the trader was looked upon by the Indians as a
benefactor, bringing into his barren, remote, inhospitable home the
commodities to supply his wants and make his life happier. While the
Indians came to recognize this in their docile and pliable acceptance
of the trader's decisions, the trader also became fond of the Red man,
and many an old fur trader freely declares his affection for his
Indian ward, so faithful to his promise, unswerving in his attachment,
and celebrated for never forgetting a kindness shown him.
The success of the Company was largely due to
honourable, capable, and patient officers, clerks, and employes, who
with tact and Justice managed their Indian dependents, many of whom
rejoiced in the title of "A Hudson's Bay Company Indian."