North of Athabasca

Slave Lake and Mackenzie River Documents of North West Company, 1800-1821

By Lloyd Keith
Categories: Industry, Canadian History
Series: Rupert's Land Record Society Series
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773520981, 552 pages, March 2001
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773568716, 552 pages, March 2001

Description

Using unused or little-known documents, Keith fills in gaps and corrects inconsistencies in previous information about the company. North of Athabasca not only includes the extensively annotated texts of eleven North West Company documents but Keith's introductory essay amplifies what is known about the context of the fur trade. His biographical notes provide personal details about the proprietors and clerks involved in the fur trade as well as the engagés and aboriginal trading leaders. A sketch of the trading activities of every Native mentioned in the journals is included. Engagés are shown to be more than labouring drones - Keith demonstrates that men such as Jean-Baptiste LaPrise were as important in furthering the interests of the North West Company north of Athabasca as any of the clerks or proprietors who kept the accounts and wrote the journals included here. The journals, often in fractured English or colloquial Canadian French, and incorporating aboriginal terminology, make intriguing reading. A glossary is provided to assist with some of the more arcane terms. North of Athabasca fills an important void in the literature on this period and region. Readers interested in fur trade history as well as students of exploration, genealogy, ethnography, and Native studies will find this a welcome addition to the literature on a fascinating topic.

Reviews

"A valuable collection. Keith has undertaken very thorough research and has paid great attention to detail, pulling together into a single collection all the most significant documents of the North West Company." Arthur J. Ray, Department of History, University of British Columbia "A valuable compilation of documents relating to that important firm ... a ready source for historians, anthropologists, and others interested in those places and times." Shepard Krech III, Department of Anthropology, Brown University