The HBC Brigades: Culture, conflict and perilous journeys of the fur trade

Nancy Marguerite Anderson
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The HBC Brigades: Culture, conflict and perilous journeys of the fur trade

Nancy Marguerite Anderson
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Trouvé dans : History & Political Science, Canadian History

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CANADA318 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : Jul 30, 2024
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 318
  • Éditeur : Ronsdale Press
  • ISBN : 9781553807018
  • Dimensions : 6.07" W x 0.82" L x 9.03" H
Nancy Marguerite Anderson is an Indigenous writer descended from three generations of fur traders who worked on the west side of the Rocky Mountains before 1858. Because of her Scottish ancestors' involvement with the York Factory Express and the HBC Brigades on the Pacific Slopes, she has (to her surprise) become a transportation historian of sorts, writing about the journeys that the Hudson's Bay Company men made both east and west of the Rocky Mountains.
A Canadian Bestseller

"A fine book with crisp writing nicely balanced between the author's voice and the journals of the HBC men." – BC BookWorld

"This book not only helps readers better understand our pre-colonial past and neo-colonial present, it also reminds us that people were tougher back then. It is likely to be an especially good read for people – Indigenous, Metis, and settler – living along the routes travelled by the HBC brigades." - The BC Review

"Offers a detailed analysis of early trails and river routes supporting the British Columbia fur trade. British Columbia was not a canoe frontier. Rather, company business largely came to depend on horse brigades. Significant to all this history were Indigenous politics, interests, and personalities. Anderson's book reminds readers that the HBC's business in British Columbia was both in fur and brigade work. The book's detailed maps will delight readers familiar with current BC topographical points and highway systems." - BC Studies

"With vivid prose and historical sensitivity, this fine book takes the reader over rugged mountains and along raging rivers that challenged men, horses, and boats. Enlivened by the words of the explorers who established the trails and the brigade leaders who used them, the text is further enhanced by pertinent illustrations and excellent maps." – Tom Holloway, fur trade historian

"Historically accurate and engaging narratives that connect us all to our diffuse and yet collective past. Herself having deep family roots in the fur-trade and possessing a penchant for story-telling, Anderson's work is a gift that must be read to be appreciated." – Bruce McIntyre Watson, author of Lives Lived West of the Divide

"Anderson has mined obscure archives and collections of correspondence, official and private, to provide a fresh and authoritative account of the men and logistics of this remarkable enterprise. An essential reference for anyone interested in early BC." – Richard Mackie, publisher, The British Columbia Review

"A sweeping narrative with compelling description of the routes, trails and roads of the fur trade. My family traveled the HBC brigade trails during the 1820s and 1830s. Anderson's comprehensive account of my ancestors' playground pleases me a lot." – Sam Pambrun

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