The "Grand Monarque" humbled—Caught
napping—The Company in peril—Glorious Utrecht—Forts
restored—Damages to be considered—Commission useless.
Louis XIV. of France, by his ambition and
greed in 1690, united against himself the four nations
immediately surrounding him—Germany, Spain, Holland, and
England, in what they called "The Grand Alliance." Battles, by
land and sea for six years, brought Louis into straits,
unrelieved by such brilliant episodes as the naval prodigies
wrought by D'Iberville on Hudson Bay. In 1696, "Le Grand
Monarque" was sufficiently humbled to make overtures for peace.
The opposing nations accepted these, and on May 9th, 1697, the
representatives of the nations met at William III.'s Chateau of
Neuberg Hansen, near the village of Ryswick, which is in
Belgium, a short distance from the Hague.
Louis had encouraged the Jacobite cause,
James III. being indeed a resident of the Castle of St. Germain,
near Paris. This had greatly irritated William, and one of the
first things settled at the Treaty was the recognition of
William as rightful King of England.
Article VII. of the Treaty compelled the
restoration to the King of France and the King of Great Britain
respectively of "all countries, islands, forts, and colonies,"
which cither had possessed before the declaration of war in
1690. However satisfactory this may have been in Acadia and
Newfoundland, we find that it did not meet the case of the
Hudson Bay, inasmuch as the ownership of this region was, as we
have seen, claimed by both parties before the war. In the
documents of the Company there is evidence of the great anxiety
caused to the adventurers when the news reached London, as to
what was likely to be the basis of settlement of the Treaty. The
adventurers at once set themselves to work to bring influence to
bear against the threatened result. The impression seemed to
prevail that they had been "caught napping," and possibly they
could not accomplish anything. Their most influential deputation
came to the Hague, and, though late in the day, did avail
somewhat.
No doubt Article VII. of the Treaty
embodies the results of their influence. It is so important for
our purpose that we give it in full:—"Commissioners should be
appointed on both sides to examine and determine the rights and
pretensions which either of the said Kings have to the places
situated in Hudson Bay ; but the possession of those places
which were taken by the French during the peace that preceded
this war, and were retaken by the English during this war, shall
be left to the French, by virtue of the foregoing articles. The
capitulation made by the English on September 5th, 1695, shall
be observed according to the form and tenor ; the merchandises
therein mentioned shall be restored ; the Governor at the fort
taken there shall be set at liberty, if it be not already done;
the differences which have arisen concerning the execution of
the said capitulation and the value of the goods there lost,
shall be adjudicated and determined by the said commissioners;
who immediately after the ratification of the present Treaty,
shall be invested with sufficient authority for the setting of
the limits and confines of the lands to be restored on either
side by virtue of the foregoing article, and likewise for
exchanging of lands, as may conduce to the mutual interest and
advantage of both Kings."
This agreement presents a few salient
points :—
1. The concession to France of rights
(undefined, it is true), but of rights not hitherto acknowledged
by the English.
2. The case of the Company, which would
have been seriously prejudiced by Article VII., is kept open,
and commissioners are appointed to examine and decide
boundaries.
3. The claim for damages so urgently
pressed by the Hudson's Bay Company receives some recognition in
the restoration of merchandize and the investigation into the
"value of the goods lost."
4, On the whole, the interests of the
Hudson's Bay Company would seem to have been decidedly
prejudiced by the Treaty.
The affairs of the Company were in a very
unfortunate condition for fifteen years after the Treaty of
Ryswick. The Treaty took place in the very year of D'Iberville's
remarkable victories in the Bay. That each nation should hold
that of which it was in actual possession meant that of the
seven Hudson's Bay Company forts, only Fort Albany was left to
the Company. The Company began to petition at once for the
appointment of the Commissioners provided by the Treaty, to
settle the matter in dispute. The desperate condition of their
affairs accounts for the memorials presented to the British
Government by the Company in 1700 and in the succeeding year, by
which they expressed themselves as satisfied to give the French
the southern portion of the Bay from Rupert's River on the east
and Albany Fort on the west. About the time of the second of
these proposals the Hudson's Bay Company sent to the British
Government another petition of a very different tone, stating
their perilous condition, arising from their not receiving
one-fifth of the usual quantity of furs, even from Fort Albany,
which made their year's trade an absolute loss ; they propose
that an expedition of "three men-of-war, one bomb-vessel, and
250 soldiers" should be sent to dislodge the French and to
regain the whole Bay for them, as being the original owners. No
steps on the part of the Ryswick Commissioners seem to have been
taken toward settling the question of boundaries in Hudson Bay.
The great Marlborough victories, however,
crushed the power of France, and when Louis XIV. next negotiated
with the allies at Utrecht—"The Ferry of the Rhine"—in 1713, the
English case was in a very different form from what it had been
at the Treaty of Ryswick. Two years before the Treaty, when it
was evident that the war would be brought to an end, the
Hudson's Bay Company plucked up courage and petitioned strongly
to be allowed the use of the whole of Hudson Bay, and to have
their losses on the Bay repaid by France. Several times during
the war had France sued for peace at the hands of the allies,
but the request had been refused. To humble France seemed to be
the fixed policy of all her neighbours. At the end of the war,
in which France was simply able to hold what she could defend by
her fortresses, the great kingdom of Louis XIV. found itself
"miserably exhausted, her revenue greatly fallen off, her
currency depreciated thirty per cent., the choicest of her
nobles drafted into the army, and her merchants and industrious
artisans weighed down to the ground by heavy imposts." This was
England's opportunity, and she profited by it. Besides "the
balance of power" in Europe being preserved, Great Britain
received Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, certain West India Islands,
and the undisturbed control of the Iroquois.
Sections X. and XI. of the Treaty are of
special value to us in our recital. By the former of these the
entire west coast of Hudson Bay became British; the French were
to evacuate all posts on the Bay and surrender all war material
within six months; Commissioners were to be appointed to
determine within a year the boundary between Canada and the
British possessions on Hudson Bay. Section XI. provided "that
the French King should take care that satisfaction be given,
according to the rule of justice and equity, to the English
Company trading to the Bay of Hudson, for all damages and spoil
done to their colonies, ships, persons, and goods, by the
hostile incursions and depredations of the French in time of
peace." This was to be arrived at by Commissioners to be
appointed.
If the Hudson's Bay Company, to quote their
own language in regard to the Treaty of Ryswick, had been left
"the only mourners by the peace," they were to be congratulated
on the results of the Treaty of Utrecht. As in so many other
cases, however, disputed points left to be settled by
Commissioners lingered long before results were reached. Six
years after the Treaty of Utrecht, the Memorial of the Hudson's
Bay Company shows that while they had received back their forts,
yet the line of delimitation between Canada had not been drawn
and their losses had not been paid.
In the preceding chapter we have a list of
the claims against the French as computed in 1694, amounting to
upwards of 200,000l.; now, however, the amount demanded is not
much above 100,000l., though the Memorial explains that in
making up the above modest sum, they had not counted up the loss
of their forts, nor the damage done to their trade, as had been
done in the former case. Immediately after the time of this
Memorial of the Company, the Commissioners were named by Great
Britain and France, and several meetings took place. Statements
were then given in, chiefly as to the boundaries between the
British and French possessions in the neighbourhood of Hudson
Bay and Canada. The Commissioners for several years practised
all the arts of diplomacy, and were farther and farther apart as
the discussions went on. No result seems to have been reached,
and the claims of the Hudson's Bay Company, so far as recorded,
were never met. Peace, however, prevailed in Hudson Bay for many
years; the Indians from the interior, even to the Rocky
Mountains, made their visits to the Bay for the first forty
years of the eighteenth century, and the fur trade, undisturbed,
became again remunerative.