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         Hudsons Bay Company Fur Trade Canada:     more books (43)

61. WorldBook General Reference Encyclopedia > History > United States > Westward Mo
WHEREAS the Competition in the fur trade between the Governor and company ofAdventurers of England trading into hudsons bay , and certain
http://surfablebooks.com/worldbookgeneral/History/United States/Westward Movemen

WorldBook General Reference Encyclopedia
History United States Westward Movement ... Fur trade Fur trade Search the Web with WorldBook All of Surfable Books Match: All Any Boolean
Documents 51 - 60 of 135 on the subject : Fur trade Add to my e-mail alerts Lieutenant-Governor Coldens Account of the Fur Trade and ...
Lieutenant-Governor Coldens Account of the Fur Trade and ... ... of the war, much less to adventure trading in the Indian countries, so lately ... before taken notice of, by the fur trade of Canada being restrained to one ...
Found by: Google
http://www.history.rochester.edu/canal/bib/hosack/app0n.html

Thunder Bay Maritime History - Fur Trade
Thunder Bay Maritime History - Fur Trade ... Fur Trade . Excerpted from the Final Environmental Impact Statement / Management Plan. By the ...
Found by: Google2
http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/glsr/thunderbay/history/furtrade.html

Jasper National Park - History - The Fur Trade and ...
Jasper National Park - History - The Fur Trade and ... Jasper and Mt. Robson - History Fur Trade and Exploration. © All oil paintings ...
Found by: Google2
http://www.canadianrockies.net/jasper/furtrade.html

62. History (cont.)
the colony of New France French fur traders, explorers were purchased from the hudsons'sBay company to become Mulroney signed free trade agreements with the US
http://jeffcoweb.jeffco.k12.co.us/middle/deercreek/works/canada/history2.htm
History (cont.) Home General Information Land Features History ... Scenes from Canada

63. Pig's Eye's Notepad - F
Rice as a clerk in the Winnebago trade at Fort QC, in 1815, son of a hudsons bay companyemployee accepted a clerkship in the American fur company, and arrived
http://www.lareau.org/pep-f.html
[ F ] - Pig's Eye's Notepad - [ F ]
FARIBAULT, AGNES - Born in 1829 in Minnesota. Daughter of St. Paul trader Alexandre Faribault , she was married in 1846 to William H. Forbes as his first wife. FARIBAULT, ALEXANDRE Jean Baptiste Faribault . He married at Mendota in 1842 to Elizabeth Marie Graham, and had many children, including: Agnes , George, Pelagie, Emilie, Daniel, Catherine, Julia, Natalie, and Richard. He later moved to Faribault, MN, named for him, where he died in 1882. FARIBAULT, DAVID - The son of Jean Baptiste Faribault , he was born in about 1816. He spent his early years in Mendota, and in 1846 opened a trading house on what would have been Bench Street between Jackson and Robert. He also purchased much property in St. Paul, and in 1847, he built the New England House . He married Suzanne, and had a number of children, including David, William, and Louis. In his later years, he moved to Cheyenne River in the Dakota Territory. FARIBAULT, JEAN BAPTISTE - Born in Berthier, QC, in 1773, he was a well known early leader of the Indian trade in Minnesota and the upper midwest. He ultimately settled in Mendota. He was married to Pelagie Kinnie , and was the father of Alexandre Faribault and David Faribault FARRINGTON, GEORGE W.

64. Untitled
a Book Entitled A Voyage to hudsons bay in the Emigration Overland Along the OldHudson's bay company Route from The Nor'westers the Fight for the fur trade.
http://www.members.shaw.ca/gearens/HistandClass/bibliofur.htm
FUR TRADE BIBLIOGRAPHY
Primary Sources

Atcheson, Nathaniel. On the Origin and Progress of the North-West Company of Canada: With a History of the Fur Trade, as Connected with That Concern, and Observations on the Political Importance of the Company's Intercourse with, and Influence Over the Indians or Savage Nations of the Interior, and on the Necessity of Maintaining and Supporting the System from Which That Influence Arises, and by Whicl Only It Can be Preserved . London: Cox, Son and Baylis, 1811. On the Origin and Progress of the North-West Company of Canada with a History of the Fur Trade, as Connected with That Concern, and Observations on the Political Importance of the Company's Intercourse with, and Influence Over the Indians or Savage Nations of the Interior, and on the Necessity of Maintaining and Supporting the System from Which That Influence Arises, and by Which Only It Can be Preserved. London: Printed by Cox, Son and Baylis, 1982. Bagley, Charles B., ed. "Journal of Occurrences at Nisqually House." The Washington Historical Quarterly VI (1915): 179-97.

65. Surname Registry Results
left the Islands early in the Pacific Northwest fur and lumber trade days in the Theycame with the Pacific Northwest Comapny and the hudsons bay company.
http://www.geneasearch.com/cgi-bin/surname.cgi?hawaii

66. Parks Canada - Prince Of Wales Fort NHSC - Sloop Cove
Shipmate, Explorer, Governor, Author, furTrader, Naturalist. be Obtained in thatpart of hudsons bay the least beneficial to the company or Advantageous
http://www2.parkscanada.gc.ca/parks/manitoba/Prince_Wales_Fort/sloopcove/english
    SLOOP COVE SIGNATURES
    Signatures


    Parks Canada/PWF-Sloop Collection
    Richard Camm
    sailor
    Richard Camm was a member of the crew of the Company's ship Seahorse (I) when she sailed to Churchill from England in 1744. In this year "The English and French having declared war against each other, and the war with Spain still continuing", the Company fitted out the Seahorse with fifty men and eighteen months' provisions and ordered Captain John Fowler to sail her at Churchill and then from Churchill to York Fort. Ten or eleven men were left at York and the Seahorse returned to Churchill for the winter. These special precautions were taken to improve defense of the factories at York and Churchill. Richard Camm must have been among those members of the crew who wintered at Churchill, for the Churchill account book for 1744-45 contains his account for goods received, signed "Richard Camm". On 15 October 1745 He was "Paid in full for wages on board the Seahorse " a sum of £39. 10s. 3d. The

67. Local History, Legends And Stories From The FV Hiking Adventures Region
as supply stations, steamboat landings and trade posts during fur trader started arrivingin the area The hudsons bay company founded a trading post nearby at
http://www.outdooradventuresbc.com/history.htm
"A l and full of stories and folklore from early settlers, prospectors and adventurers"
The Fraser Valley -

A funnel shaped valley in the southwest corner of British Columbia. It is approximately 150 kilometers long and 90 kilometers wide at the mouth of the Fraser River. Vancouver defines it on its western end and Hope on the east. Many of the communities within the Valley were started as supply stations, steamboat landings and trade posts during the Gold rush days of the late 1850's. The Valley is surrounded by the Coast Mountain Range to the north and by the Cascades Range on the east and southeast. Many of these mountains reach to 2000+ meters in elevation and retain snow year round.
The Fraser River, one of the longest rivers in Canada, essentially splits the Valley as it courses to the ocean and is fed by many smaller glaciated rivers rushing from the surrounding mountains. Numerous lakes dot the valley and surrounding area (195 at last count) and are the treasure store of fish and wildlife in Southwestern BC. The larger lakes in this area include Stave and Harrison lakes on the north side and Cultus and Chilliwack lakes to the east.

68. Canadian History
Empire of the bay An Illustrated History of the hudsons bay company. It sparkeda great mining rush in canada, sending men North in desperate search of riches
http://www.maxdelta.com/category1.asp?cat=3

69. Index Des Publications Sur L'histoire Et La Conservation Des Collections
Translate this page Sujet - mots clés anglais fur trade. Sujet - région géographique Hudsonsbay. Sujet - nom géogr. Sujet - entreprise Hudson's bay company.
http://daryl.chin.gc.ca:8001/BASIS/chip/user/www/EDW?W=AUT = 'ARTHUR, E.M.'&M=1

70. Hudson's Bay Company
The Hudson's bay men purposely trapped out beaver to stopped in Honolulu where a Companypost recruited thorughout the Northwest after their fur trade service.
http://members.aol.com/Gibson0817/hbc.htm
Hudson's Bay Company
Beaver fur was in great demand for European hatmakers. They pressed the thick underhair of beaver into a velvety, waterproof felt that lasted a lifetime. In 17th century London, beaver was so valuable the floors of hatter shops were scoured for lost hairs. Beavers were trapped to extinction in England by the 16th century but beaver pelts from eastern Canada and upstate New York made up the difference. Investors with a royal charter established the first Hudson's Bay Company (the Company) posts on Hudson Bay in 1670. They traded knives, axes, guns, and blankets to Indian trappers for hundreds of thousands of beaver pelts a year. For 150 years they kept up their trade, pushing further and further west. At first they only had to complete with freelance trappers. Then the well organized Montreal-based Northwest Company came in. Then came the American "mountain men" who trapped along the Missouri and into the Rockies. The last big prize was the Columbia river drainage basin. In 1811, John Jacob Astor established the first American posts there, but these were captured by the Northwest Company during the War of 1812. By then the U.S. and England had agreed to jointly occupy the Columbia region. But in 1825, the Company had built the fort at Vancouver determined to dominate the area. In 1816, Dr. John McLoughlin was serving as doctor to the Northwest Fur Company, when a skirmish broke out between Northwest and Hudson's Bay Company. Some Indians were blamed for the murder of Robert Semple, governor of the Red River colony. McLoughlin knew they were innocent so handed himself over as a representative of the Northwest Company so they could have someone to blame. Instead he was arrested for the murder. While crossing Lake Superior, his arrestors' canoe collapsed and many drowned. McLoughlin almost died himself. This was supposedly when his hair turned white over night. He was tried on October 30, 1818, but all blame was dismissed. In 1919, he helped negotiate the merger between Hudson's Bay Company and the Northwest Fur Company. He was temporarily promoted to the Lac la Pliue district when the merger happened in 1820-21, bringing their total to 173 posts stretching nearly 3 million square miles.

71. Cumberland House
by Samuel Hearne, in the interest of the hudsons bay company. between the HBC andindependent fur traders, and the base of the Hudson's bay company's operations
http://career.kcdc.ca/comm/Cumberland House.php
April 08, 2003 Northern Work Centre Funding Job Forecasts Northern Labour Market ... Home
Cumberland House Community Index Cumberland House is a community of fifteen hundred people, located approximately ninety kilometres from The Pas, Manitoba. It is situated on Pine Island in the Saskatchewan River delta, on the southern edge of the Canadian Shield. It was established in 1774 by Samuel Hearne, in the interest of the Hudsons Bay Company. Cumberland House was and is a Cree "n" dialect community, known in Cree as "Waskahikanihk".
The key factor in the establishment of Cumberland House was it's location. It is located on the Saskatchewan River, which was a key route in the fur trade. From Cumberland House, you can travel east to Hudson Bay, via Lake Winnipeg and the Nelson River. You can also travel west as far as the Rocky Mountains. It's location as an island was also important to it's establishment. The island was a meeting place even before the trading post was established here, which provided the settlement with some initial status, along with the fact that as an island, it would have been easier for travellers to locate.
In 1840, Cumberland House was the home of the first school in western Canada, founded by catechist Henry Budd, who was the first native ordained minister. It was later home to Charlebois School, which was established in 1890 by Bishop Ovide Charlebois, a small one-room school, which is still standing today. Cumberland House's first hospital was built in 1940, although the town had nurses in residence as early as 1920. Another mark Cumberland House is noted for is the number of young men who served in the two World wars. The town has produced the first native cabinet minister from the north, Keith Goulet, along with four-time world marathon canoeing champion, Solomon Carriere.

72. Civilisations.ca - Ressources En Direct - Histoire Du Canada
Translate this page Hudson's bay company at Fort Victoria http//www.tbc.gov.bc Alcohol use and the FurTrade, 1822 http//victoria.tc.ca of John Work, Chief Trader, hudsons bay Co.
http://www.civilization.ca/orch/www04k_f.html
Page d'accueil Civilisations Cultures Premiers peuples Histoire Histoire militaire Catalogue (artéfacts) Catalogue (bibliothèque) Autres sites Web Boutique
Ressources en direct sur le patrimoine canadien
Histoire Ethnologie Culture folklorique et populaire MENU PRINCIPAL
Histoire
Histoire - Canada (page 7) page 1 : Chronologie page 2 : page 3 : Histoire constitutionelle Politique et gouvernement page 4 : page 5 : Migration et colonisation page 6 : La nation canadienne page 7 : page 8 : Histoire des transports Histoire des communications page 9 : Histoire religieuse Histoire sociale Histoire des femmes
  • 73. Civilization.ca - Online Resources For Canadian Heritage - Canadian History
    Hudson's bay company at Fort Victoria http//www.tbc.gov.bc Journals of John Work,Chief Trader, hudsons bay Co fur Trading Posts in the Okanagan and Similkameen
    http://www.civilization.ca/orch/www04k_e.html
    QUICK LINKS Home page Archaeology Arts and Crafts Civilizations Cultures First Peoples History Treasures Military history Artifact catalogue Library catalogue Other Web sites Boutique
    Online Resources for Canadian Heritage
    General and reference works Geography and local history Museums and other cultural institutions
    History
    ... MAIN MENU
    History
    History - Canada (page 7) page 1: General history Chronology Historical geography page 2: Biography, demography and genealogy page 3: Emblems, symbols and flags Constitutional history Politics and government page 4: Discovery and exploration page 5: Migration and settlement page 6: The British colonial period Canada, the nation page 7: Economic history Exploitation of natural resources, Industries and trades, Labor, Commerce, Finance page 8: Transportation history Water transportation, Railways, Air transportation, Space flight Communications history page 9: Religious history Social history Women's history
  • Economic history
  • 74. Elk Lake Museum Web Site Goes Here
    fur trading remained the mainstay of the region until grow out of the Hudson’sbay company, quite the passing through Elk Lake, a hudsons bay warehouse was
    http://www.museumsnorth.org/elk_lake/
    Visit.... Timmins Musuem and National Exhibition Centre - Timmins The Hunta Museum - Hunta Elk Lake Museum - Elk Lake House of Memories / Montreal River Heritage Preservation Society - Latchford The Museum of Northern History - Kirkland Lake The Cobalt Bunker Military Museum - Cobalt Iroquois Falls Pioneer Musuem - Iroquois Falls Cobalt Northern Ontario Mining Museum / Cobalt Historical Society - Colbalt Little Claybelt Homesteaders' Museum - New Liskeard Haileybury Heritage Museum - Haileybury Cochrane Railway and Pioneer Museum - Cochrane Temagami Railway Station Restoration Trust - Temagami Thelma Miles Museum - Matheson Temiskaming Art Gallery - Haileybury Elk Lake’s unique background goes back hundreds, perhaps thousands of years before the arrival of the European. Remnants of Pictographs on rocks showed what were clearly trade routes used by the Cree and Anishnabai people. These routes were already well established prior to the establishment of the Fur Trade of the mid 1600s. Remnants of an Aboriginal graveyard that can be seen on the south side of town perhaps a testament to the fact that Elk Lake had an early settlement on it shores. The Ojibway tribe named the lake after the huge herds of elk that roamed the area at this time. Fur trading remained the mainstay of the region until the early nineteenth century when the strong white and red pine trees proved ideal material for masts to be used on British sailing ships, and the need for this and other lumber for construction and newspaper use saw the many stands along the Ottawa, and eventually the Montreal rivers, mass harvested by Lumber King

    75. Aboriginal Organizations
    mb.ca/chc/archives/hbca/index hudsons bay Archives for Children of the fur TradeForgotten Metis of the HBC Post Maps, The Hudson's bay company Archives, Innu
    http://www.metisgenealogy.com/dataaborg.htm
    The Metis Genealogy Researchers, also operating as www.metisgenealogy.com admin@metisgenealogy.com 4. Identification of the URL or other location on this site where the material that you claim is infringing is located. 5. Your name, address, telephone number and email address. Canadian Aboriginal organizations These sites are URL's to other web sites. Please use discretion while browsing. All development credits go to the developer of these sites. metisgenealogy.com has included URL's only to these sites and is in no way responsible for the outcome of your search. Our sole intention is to aid the public in their quest for genealogy and offer this service free of charge. http://www.omaa.org/ - Ontario Aboriginal Metis Association http://www.metisnation.org/ - Metis Nation of Ontario http://www.abo-peoples.org/ - Congress of Aboriginal People (CAP) http://www.ccab-canada.com/ - Canadian council for Aboriginal People http://www.heritage.nf.ca -Eastern Canadian Web site for Metis and Aboriginal resources http://www.geocities.com

    76. Ulster-details
    hudsons bay company Living History Event. a native of Bolsover and renowned Hudsonbay company surveyor. of Peter Fidler being active with the company in canada
    http://www.delareine.free-online.co.uk/NFOE-WEB-SITE/events-list/bolsover2001.ht
    Bolsover 2001
    Thursday 16th August. Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire.
    Hudsons Bay Company Living History Event
    A one-day, mid week event celebrating the life of Peter Fidler, a native of Bolsover and renowned Hudson Bay Company surveyor. T I f you are interested and would like further infomration please contact Span (address can be sort from the events co-ordinator Paul Wiggins

    77. History
    of the area was based on the lucrative fur trade. from the kilns, nor will the Hudson'sBay company house ever 250783-5741 Email district@dist.hudsons-hope.bc
    http://dist.hudsons-hope.bc.ca/html/history.html
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    OUR HISTORY Info Hotline 250-783-9901 Hudson's Hope History Fascinating Fact's "All the historical books which contain no lies are extremely tedious." Anatole France (1844-1924).
    The history of Hudson's Hope needs no lies to make it interesting. Where else can one tread in the paths - even in the very footsteps themselves - of three-storey high dinosaurs? Follow the raging river that transported Alexander Mackenzie to his destination of the Pacific Ocean . . . . even paddle a canoe over the now placid Dinosaur Lake which covers the Rocky Mountain Canyon where Mackenzie had to arduously haul his canoe up the steep cliffs when he realized he would not win against the river's wrath?
    These and other legends are preserved in the Museum in Hudson's Hope. Housed in the old Hudson's Bay Company store, the same walls that once supported supplies for trappers, guides and outfitters, the store that once sold the bright ribbons to Indians whose decorated horses then raced up and down the flat in front of the old store, now displays our legends for all visitors to see.

    78. CanHist To 17th C
    he reached Moosonee, although Moose Factory is still the area with the oldest whitesettlement in Ontario (fur traders).The HBC—hudsons’s bay company;.
    http://web.securenet.net/members/chastie/hisTL1.html
    Canadian History Time Line, Prehistory to 1710
    This site is a member of
    The History Ring
    15,000-11,000 B.C.
      Earliest North American occupation dates commonly accepted by archeologists. Artifacts in the Bluefish Caves in the Yukon from this time period
    11,000-9000 B.C. Circa 8000 B.C.
      Oldest evidence of Amerindian people living in the St.Lawrence River valley. These were hunters and did not live in settlements. Maritime Prehistoric period. Prairie prehistory overview with chronology. Niagara region inhabited by Clovis people.
    Circa 7000 B.C. Circa 6000 B.C.
      Neolithic farming begins in the Near and Far East as well as in North America.
    Circa 5000 B.C.
      Early Archaic Period ( here for all Archaic periods; follow the links for an excellent study of this time in human history). Earliest petroglyphs date from this period. Okanagan pictographs possibly date from 4000 B.C (6000 B.P—"before present")
    Circa 3000 B.C.

    79. Furtraders.html
    (Drost, 1995 8) When an oil company began to happened with the buffalo because ofthe fur traders will hudsons bay, founded by royal charter in 1670, is today
    http://www.ualberta.ca/~pimohte/furtraders.html
    From Fur Traders to Stock Traders
    by Susan Hutcheon While First Nation leaders have focused on taking back economic control of their tribal lands from the provincial and federal governments, the actual power over and control of those lands has already been taken away from the governments by the multinational or transnational corporations. Though it may appear that for First Nations focusing on economic power is buying into the corporate system of beliefs, history has taught us that with economic control inevitably goes political control. This is what colonialism is all about. (Levitt, 1970: 2) Imperialism has been replaced by corporatism, the only difference is that now the rights and lands of First Nation will no longer be taken away by the imperial sword, but by the mightier corporate pen.
    The University of Alberta
    BIBLIOGRAPHY Austin, Lisa and Boyd, Christina. The Oka Crisis. Peace Research Reviews. Volume
    XIII, Number 1, 1994. Drost, Helmar and Crowley, Brian Lee and Schwindt, Richard. Market Solutions for Native Poverty: Social Policy for the Third Solitude . Toronto: C.D. Howe Institute, 1995.

    80. Kamloops, BC - 1985 - CFS Kamloops Information Booklet - Ren L'Ecuyer
    also the centre of a fast growing tourist trade. North Westers bought out the PacificFur company and they in turn sold out to the hudsons bay company in 1821.
    http://www.pinetreeline.org/other/other23/other23l.html
    Kamloops, BC
    1985 - CFS Kamloops Information Booklet - Ren L'Ecuyer
    Mission
    CFS Kamloops is operationally responsible to the Canadian NORAD Region, North Bay, Ontario and administratively responsible to Air Command Headquarters, Winnipeg, Manitoba and Fighter Group Headquarters, North Bay, Ontario. The primary purpose of CFS Kamloops is to collect, discriminate and transmit to the designated Control Centre the radar data appearing within our area of radar coverage. Kamloops is also tasked to provide and maintain air/ground/air transmit - receive facilities in support of the Air Defence of North America.
    Location
    CFS Kamloops, the only Canadian Forces Station in the interior of BC, is located 24 km to the northeast of the City of Kamloops. Your route from Kamloops to the station is initially via the North Thompson Highway (No. 5). Approximately 5 km from Kamloops you leave Highway No. 5, turning right, onto what is locally called the Paul Lake Road. This junction is well marked and by staying on the paved road and following the signs, you will arrive at CFS Kamloops. The station is physically separated into two distinct areas. The Admin are buildings that house our CE Section, Supply Section, Headquarters (CO, CAdO, SCompt, SOR, CPO, Station Exchange, and Communications Section), MSE Section, Combined Dining Hall, small Recreation Centre, JR Ranks Mess, WOs and Sgts Mess, Officers Mess, and living quarters.

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