Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1970 | Volume 21, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1970 | Volume 21, Issue 3
The Hudson’s Bay Company was launched in an unsurmountably upper-crust ambiance, as indicated by the quality of its first three governors: Prince Rupert (who headed the company from 1670 to 1682); His Royal Highness, James, Duke of York, later King James II (16831685); and John Churchill, later the first Duke of Marlborough (1685–1692). Although all three were men of action who fought in the wars that beset their time, they viewed Hudson Bay primarily as an investment, and none of them ever made the slightest move to go and see the fabulous property. Rupert, who died in 1682, was chief author of the charter granted to the company in 1670; James’s governorship was terminated when he mounted the throne; Churchill—who was to become one of England’s great soldiers and ancestor of the late Prime Minister—lost the job when he intrigued with the exiled James in 1692.
The first century of the Hudson’s Bay Company went meagerly recorded in pictures, for its employees were far better with axe and paddle than pen and brush. Samuel Hearne was an exception. In 1770–72 he was sent to explore the unknown country to the west and north; it was hoped that he might realize the long dream of a water passage connecting lower Hudson Bay with the Pacific. Hearne reached the disappointing but enlightening conclusion that no such passage existed. He also made some excellent sketches of the starkly beautiful country he traversed. Later he was placed in command of the company’s most imposing structure, Fort Prince of Wales, which took thirty years to build and thirty minutes to surrender when three French warships surprised—or astonished—Hearne and his small garrison in 1782. (He had not heard of the war between England and France.) The French blew up the fort, but substantial ruins are still there.
Every great successful enterprise has a moving spirit, and if any one man is qualified for that title in the history of the Hudson’s Bay Company, it is Sir George Simpson. Sent over from England as an understudy to the company’s resident governor in 1820, young Simpson acquitted himself brilliantly in the fur-trade struggle with the North West Company. When the fierce competition ended in merger in 1821, he was clearly headed for the top. By 1826 he was governor-in-chief of H.B.C.’s vast territories; and that meant in effect ruling those territories as an agent of the British Crown. For almost forty years Simpson fulfilled his double task with the energy of a dynamo, driving the company to ever new heights of expansive efficiency. His organization of the great network of trappers, traders, factors, and commissioned officers has been compared both to that of the British Army and to that of the Catholic Church. He personally travelled nearly every mile of the H.B.C. trade routes, stopping overnight at all the important posts to confer with