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two companies are contained in an Act of the British
Parliament. This Act also provided for the government
of the West. The governor and directors of the Hudson's
Bay Company were given power to appoint local governors,
who presided over the meetings of the chief factors. The
less serious offences against the law were tried by local
magistrates. More serious cases were left to the courtS
of Upper Canada. There was also a council composed of
twenty-five chief factors and twenty-eight chief traders.
A strong man for the position of governor was found in
a young Scot sm an named George Simpson. For forty years
Simpson controlled the fur trade. His energy was unfailing.
Every year he made the journey from Montreal to the
distant West by the fur traders' route. He inspected the
most distant posts, and on several occasions crossed the
Rocky Mountains. To the enterprise of the Hudson's Bay
Company, in no small measure, Great Britain owes her
control of the Pacific coast. The Russians from the north,
and the Americans from the south, were pressing rival
claims which threatened to shut out Great Britain from
the Western Sea. Thanks to the activity of Simpson, the
country between the Rockies and the Pacific was occupied
by the British. Upon the coast there were six trading-posts,
and in the interior six-teen. These trading interests were
protected on the side of the ocean by a fleet of six
armed vessels.
Image: SIR GEORGE SIMPSON
179. Progress of the Selkirk settlement.-Meanwhile,
the Selkirk settlement was winning its way to prosperity.
The population, composed at the outset of two hundred
Scottish and Irish settlers, one hundred German soldiers,
and a number of French traders and half-breeds, was
steadily in-creasing. The hardships of pioneer life in
eastern Canada were here repeated. Spade and hoe, sickle
and cradle, flail and quern-all told of the day of small
things. The land was just beginning to yield a scanty
living, when a series of disasters swept away the fruits
of patient labour. For three years in succession clouds
of grasshoppers descended upon the land, making of the
fields a "desolate wilderness." A few years later the
Red River overflowed its banks and swept over the fields,
driving back the settlers to the neighbouring heights,
and carrying off houses and barns. The courage of the
settlers, however, was equal to all these misfortunes and
brought them through to better days.
For many years the government of the colony was in the
hands of the local governor of the Hudson's Bay Company,
assisteed by a local council. Growth made a change neces-
sary. In 1834 the Hudson's Bay Company bought back from
the heirs of Lord Selkirk the land originally sold to him.
In the next year the Council of Assiniboia, the governing
body of the colony, was reorganized, with Sir George
Simpson as president. The council consisted of fifteen
members appointed by the company. The new arrangement,
however, was not altogether satisfactory. The people com-
plained that the councillors were too closely connected
with the company to represent the popular will. Discontent
was a sign of progress, a sign that the settlement was
growing beyond the control of a fur company. The historic
centre of the colony was Fort Garry. A weather-beaten
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MACMILLAN'S WESTERN CANADA SERIES
The West 1763-1812, The West 1812-1841, Western Canada,
1870-1920, The Prairie Provinces and The Rise of the
North West, North West, Prairies, prairie provinces,
Western provinces, Sask Gen Web, Saskatchewan Gen Web
THE STORY
OF
THE CANADIAN PEOPLE
Canada history, Ca, Can, Canada, Canada by A.G. Bradley,
A.G. Bradley, Canadian History, The Story of the Canadian
People, Duncan, The Western Canada Series, David Duncan
NEW EDITION
BY DAVID M. DUNCAN, M.A.
ASSISTANT-SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, WINNIPEG
NOTE: This edition is for use during the School
Year of 1923-24 in the Provinces of
Manitoba and Alberta.
TORONTO
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED
1924
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Canada history, Ca, Can, Canada, Canada by A.G. Bradley,
A.G. Bradley, Canadian History, The Story of the Canadian
People, Duncan, The Western Canada Series, David Duncan
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