In seeking the sublime and picturesque Hearn found in the northern landscape “what he had been taught to look for.” A landscape of barren hills and open marshes is appropriate for the barbarity of Hearne’s account.
Samuel Hearne & the Landscapes of Discovery.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
“Samuel Hearne’s Accounts of the Massacre at Bloody Fall, 17 July 1771”
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
By comparing Hearne’s field notes to the posthumous published vision of Hearne’s Journey, Maclaren calls into question the later Hearne account of the young woman at Bloody Fall. George Back was the first to call it into question. The horrid elaboration comes in the published version, not before, and indicates a good deal of editorial meddling. In his notes Hearne is only a neutral onlooker; in publication he is a reluctant participant.
The Last Gentleman Adventurer: Coming of Age in the Arctic.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
Delightful book about an HBC agent who at 20 was assigned alone to Pangnirtung and Frobisher Bay where he successfully assimilated to Inuit culture.
This Blessed Wilderness: Archibald McDonald’s Letters from the Columbia, 1822-44.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
McDonald was a chief trader in the Pacific Northwest for the HBC just after it had merged with the North West Company in 1821.
Ancient Mariner: The Arctic Adventures of Samuel Hearne, the Sailor who Inspired Coleridge’s Masterpiece.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
A rather jaunty (i.e. unscholarly) account of Hearne’s adventures, with very little on Coleridge other than their meeting.
John McLean’s Notes of a Twenty-Five Years’ Service in the Hudson’s Bay Territory.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
Clearly an unhappy camper though apparently a faithful member of the HBC, disillusioned by its commercial purposes at the exclusion of anything else, and also by his disappointment in promotion within the company.
Behind the Palisades: An Autobiography.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
McTavish (1834-93) was appointed Chief Trader of the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1859, serving in several posts including Fort William, Albany, Rupert’s House, Moose Factory, and other locations. He retired in 1880; this posthumously published autobiography shows him very supportive and loyal to the Company.
Company of Adventurers: The Story of the Hudson’s Bay Company.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
p. xxviii-ix: Returned to English possession by the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, York Factory was sacked nearly seventy years later by a valiant raiding party of French marines who had dashed north from the West Indies during the American Revolution. Joseph Colen, the HBC Chief Factor in charge of rebuilding it (and York Factory’s first resident intellectual; he moved in with a library of fourteen hundred books), decided to shift operations to their present site….
The Most Respectable Place in the Territory: Everyday Life in Hudson’s Bay Company Service, York Factory, 1788 to 1870.
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
Section on ‘Leisure’ has a lengthy section on books and reading in the camp.
Literacy, Literature and Libraries in the Fur Trade,
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
p. 44: However fortunately for me I have dead Friends (my Books) who will never abandon me, till I first neglect them. [Daniel Williams Harmon at Fort Alexandria in 1803.]
An Account of Six Years Residence in Hudson’s Bay, from 1733 to 1736, and 1744 to 1747….
- Hudson's Bay Company.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
A candid and critical account of the management of HBC by a disaffected employee who rails against the abuses of natives, ignorance of architecture, and the petty self-interest of both the factors and the proprietors in London.
This Distant and Unsurveyed Country.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
p. 158: To keep the men alert and cheerful at winter harbor on the search expedition [Franklin search 1850-51], Penny’s surgeons had organized the “Royal Cornwallis Theatre” on board the Lady Franklin. Drawing actors from both ships and also from Sir John Ross’s nearby vessel, the company distributed printed handbills and performed in front of an audience of fifty, wearing calico costumes and accompanied by music that was described—possibly, with some exaggeration—as “tolerable” (Sutherland 1852: I. 428). At about the same time, the “Arctic Academy” got under way, also under the direction of the surgeons. Its classes ran for three hours a night, four nights a week. Reading, writing, and arithmetic formed the basis of the curriculum, but geography excited the men’s interest in a special way because some of them had sailed on merchant voyages to various parts of the world. Despite a limited supply of educational materials (slates, some paper and pencils, an old world map, and one copy of Johnston’sPhysical Atlas),the seamen (some of whom were barely literate) eagerly participated in discussions of global physical and human geography. The brightest men on the ships showed promise of learning elementary navigation by winter’s end.
Cold Comfort: My Love Affair with the Arctic.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
This is a rather dry account of a mid-1930s expedition to map the coastline of Baffin Island and the Foxe Basin and also some archaeological work on Thule and Dorset cultures. There are scattered reading references:
Minutes of Council Northern Department of Rupert Land, 1821-31….
- Arctic Reading: Canada
p. 60, minutes of July 5, 1823, minutes of Council: 153. That for the more effectual civilization and moral improvement of the families attached to the different establishments and the Indians—Every Sunday when circumstances permit, divine Service be publickly read with becoming solemnity…., at which ever man woman and child resident must attend, together with such of the Indians who may be at hand… 154. That for this purpose, the requisite supply of Religious Books be imported by and at the expense of the Company, to consist of Books of Common Prayer of Sermons & Bibles”—also sermons in French for Canadians. [An item in 1824 added the urging of Parents to teach A.B.C. Catechism. Similar entries appeared in the next four years. See also pages 121, 135, 174, 201, and 230-31.]
Saskatchewan Journals and Correspondence. Edmonton House 1795-1800; Chesterfield House 1800-1802.
- Arctic Reading: Canada
p. ??, Peter Fidler at Norway House in 1800: But he provided himself very well with the means to spend profitably any time he could take off from fur trading or hunting buffalo, for he undoubtedly took to Chesterfield House the instruments, nautical almanacs and books which had been sent to him by the ship of 1799 and on which he had spent no less than £30 out of his salary of £60 for season 1798-99. [Footnote 6: The books sent to Fidler in 1799 were Poets & Novels; Hennes Eng.; Goldsmith’s Grecian History and his Roman History; Charles Hutton’s Mathematical and Philosophical Dictionary; his Compendious Measurer; Diarian Miscellany; John Gay’s Fables; Guide to old age; Charles Vyse’s Arithmetic; an abridged Buffon’s Natural History; Samuel Hearne’s Journey to the Northern Ocean; Monthly Reviews; Annual Register; John Imison’s School of Art; Samuel Vince’s Practical Astronomy; John Wilson’s Trigonometry; and Leadbeater’s Drawing. p. lxxxv-lxxxvi]