Dashing French trader—"The
country of fashion"—An air of great
superiority—The road is that of heaven—Enough to
intimidate a Caesar—"The Bear" and the "Little
Branch"—Yet more rum—A great Irishman—"In the
wigwam of Wabogish dwelt his beautiful
daughter"—Wedge of gold—Johnston and Henry
Schoolcraft—Duncan Cameron on Lake Superior—His
views of trade—Peter Grant, the ready
writer—Paddling the canoe— Indian
folk-lore—Chippewa burials—Remarkable men and
great financiers, marvellous explorers, facile
traders.
A DASHING FRENCH
TRADER—FRANCOIS VICTOR MALHIOT.
A gay and intelligent French
lad, taken with the desire of leading the life of
the traders in the "upper country" (pays d'en
haut), at the age of fifteen deserted school and
entered the North-West Company. In 1796, at the
age of twenty, he was promoted to a clerkship and
sent to a post in the upper part of the Red River
country. On account of his inferior education ho
was never advanced to the charge of a post in the
Company's service, but he was always noted for his
courage and the great energy displayed by him in
action. In 1804 Malhiot was sent to Wisconsin,
where he carried on trade.
For the North-West Company
there ho built a fort and waged a vigorous warfare
with the other traders, strong drink being one of
the most ready weapons in the contest. In 1801 the
trader married after the "country fashion" (à la
facon du pays), i.e. as we have explained, he had
taken an Indian woman to be his wife, with the
understanding that when he retired from the fur
trade, she should be left provided for as to her
living, but bo free to marry another.
Malhiot tired of the fur
trade in 1807 and returned to Lower Canada, where
he lived till his death. Malhiot's Indian wife was
afterwards twice married, and one of her sons by
the third marriage became a member of the
Legislature in Lower Canada. A brother of
Malhiot's became a colonel in the British army in
India, and another brother was an influential man
in his native province.
Few traders had more
adventures than this French Canadian. Stationed
west of Lake Superior, at Lac du Flambeau, Malhiot
found himself surrounded by men of the X Y
Company, and he assumed an air of great
superiority in his dealings with the Indians. Two
of his companions introduced him to the savages as
the brother of William McGillivray, the head of
the North-West Company. He says, "This thing has
produced a very good effect up to the present, for
they never name me otherwise than as their
'father.' I am glad to believe that they will
respect me more than they otherwise would have
done, and will do themselves the honour of trading
with me this winter."
Speaking of the rough country
through which he was passing, Malhiot says, "Of
all the passages and places that I have been able
to see during the thirteen years in which I
travelled, this is the most frightful and
unattractive. The road of the portage is truly
that of heaven, for it is strait, full of
obstacles, slippery places, thorns, and bogs. The
men who pass it loaded, and who are obliged to
carry over it bales, certainly deserve the name of
'men.'
"This villainous portage is
only inhabited by owls, because no other animal
could find its living there, and the cries of
these solitary birds are enough to frighten an
angel and to intimidate a Caesar."
Malhiot maintained his
dignified attitude to the Indians and held great
conferences with the chiefs, always with an eye to
the improvement of trade. To one he says:—
"My Father,—It is with great
Joy that I smoke in thy pipe of peace and that I
receive thy word. Our chief trader at
Kaministiquia will accept it, I trust, this
spring, with satisfaction, and he will send thee a
mark of his friendship, if thou dost continue to
do well. So I take courage! Only be as one, and
look at the fort of the X Y from a distance if
thou dost wish to attain to what thou desirest."
In April, 1805, the trader
says, "My people have finished building my fort,
and it is the prettiest of any in the Indian
country. Long live the North-West Company! Honour
to Malhiot!"
Malhiot gives a very sad
picture of the degeneracy of the trade at this
time, produced by the use of strong drink in
gaining the friendship of the Indians. A single
example may suffice to show the state of affairs.
April 26th.—"The son of
'Whetstone,' brother-in-law of Chorette, came here
this evening and made me a present of one otter,
15 rats, and 12 lbs. of sugar, for which I gave
him 4 pots of rum. He made them drunk at
Chorette's with the 'Indians,' the 'Bear,' and
'the Little Branch.' When they were well
intoxicated, they cleared the house, very nearly
killed Chorette, shot La Lancette, and broke open
the store-house. They carried away two otters, for
which I gave them more rum this morning, but
without knowing they had been stolen. All this
destruction occurred because Chorette had promised
them more rum, and that he had not any more."
Malhiot's journal closes with
the statement that after a long journey from the
interior he and his party had camped in view of
the island at Grand Portage.
AN IRISHMAN OF DISTINCTION.
In the conflict of the
North-West, X Y, and Hudson's Bay Companies, it is
interesting to come upon the life and writing of
an Irishman, a man of means, who, out of love for
the wilds of Lake Superior, settled down upon its
shores and became a "free trader," as ho was
called. This was John Johnston, who came to
Montreal, enjoyed the friendship of Sir Guy
Carleton, the Governor of Canada, and hearing of
the romantic life of the fur traders, plunged into
the interior, in 1792 settled at La Pointe, on the
south side of Lake Superior, and established
himself as an independent trader. A gentleman of
birth and education, Johnston seems to have
possessed a refined and even religious spirit.
Filled with high thoughts inspired by a rocky and
romantic island along the shore, he named it
"Contemplation Island." Determined to pass his
life on the rocky but picturesque shores of Lake
Superior, Johnston became friendly with the Indian
people. The old story of love and marriage comes
in here also. The chief of the region was Wabogish,
the "White Fisher," whose power extended as far
west as the Mississippi. In the wigwam of Wabogish
dwelt his beautiful daughter. Her hand had been
sought by many young braves, but she had refused
them all. The handsome, sprightly Irishman had,
however, gained her affections, and proposed to
her father for her. Writing long afterward he
describes her as she was when he first saw her, a
year after his arrival on the shores of Lake
Superior. "Wabogish or the 'White Fisher,' the
chief of La Pointe, made his sugar on the skirts
of a high mountain, four days' march from the
entrance of the river to the south-east. His
eldest daughter, a girl of fourteen, exceedingly
handsome, with a cousin of hers who was two or
three years older, rambling one day up the eastern
side of the mountain, came to a perpendicular
cliff exactly fronting the rising sun. Near the
base of the cliff they found a piece of yellow
metal, as they called it, about eighteen inches
long, a foot broad, four inches thick and
perfectly smooth. It was so heavy that they could
raise it only with great difficulty. After
examining it for some time, it occurred to the
eldest girl that it belonged to the 'Gitche
Manitou,' 'The Great Spirit,' upon which they
abandoned the place with precipitation.
"As the Chippewas are not
idolaters, it occurs to me that some of the
southern tribes must have emigrated thus far to
the North, and that the piece either of copper or
of gold is part of an altar dedicated to the sun.
If my conjecture is right, the slab is more
probably gold—as the Mexicans have more of that
metal than they have of copper."
The advances of Johnston
toward chief Wabogish for marriage to his daughter
were for a time resisted by the forest magnate.
Afraid of the marriages made after the country
fashion, he advised Johnston to return to his
native country for a time. If, after a sufficient
absence, his affection for his daughter should
still remain strong, he would consent to their
marriage. Johnston returned to Ireland, disposed
of his property, and came back to Lake Superior to
claim his bride.
Johnston settled at Sault
Ste. Marie, where he had a "very considerable
establishment with extensive plantations of corn
and vegetables, a beautiful garden, a comfortable
house, a good library, and carried on an important
trade."
During the war of 1814 he
co-operated with the British commandant, Colonel
McDonald, in taking the island of Michilimackinac
from the Americans. While absent, the American
expedition landed at Sault Ste. Marie, and set
fire to Johnston's house, stables, and other
buildings, and these were burnt to the ground, his
wife and children viewing the destruction of their
home from the neighbouring woods.
Masson says: "A few years
afterwards, Mr. Johnston once more visited his
native land, accompanied by his wife and his
eldest daughter, a young lady of surpassing
beauty. Every inducement was offered to them to
remain in the old country, the Duke and Duchess of
Northumberland having even offered to adopt their
daughter. They preferred, however, returning to
the shores of Lake Superior, where Miss Johnston
was married to Mr. Henry Schoolcraft, the United
States Indian agent at Sault Ste. Marie, and the
distinguished author of the 'History of the Indian
Tribes of the United States.'" Mr. Johnston wrote
"An Account of Lake Superior" at the request of
Roderick McKenzie. This we have, but it is chiefly
a geographical description of the greatest of
American lakes. Johnston died at Sault Ste. Mario
in 1828."
A DETERMINED TRADER OF LAKE
SUPERIOR.
A most daring and impulsive
Celt was Duncan Cameron. He and his family were
Scottish U. E. Loyalists from the Mohawk River in
New York State. As a young man he entered the fur
trade, and was despatched to the region on Lake
Superior to serve under Mr. Shaw, the father of
Angus Shaw, of whom we have already spoken. In
1786 Cameron became a clerk and was placed in
charge of the Nepigon district, an important field
for his energies. Though this region was a
difficult one, yet by hard work he made it
remunerative to his Company. Speaking of his
illness, caused by exposure, he says, in writing a
letter to his friend, "I can assure you it is with
great difficulty I can hold my pen, but I must
tell you that the X Y sends into the Nepigon this
year ; therefore, should I leave my bones there, I
shall go to winter."
In response to the
application of Roderick McKenzie, Duncan Cameron
sent a description of the Nepigon district and a
journal of one of his Journeys to the interior.
From these we may give a few extracts. Passing
over his rather full and detailed account of
Saulteaux Indians of this region, we find that he
speaks in a journal which is in a very damaged
condition, of his visit to Osnaburgh Fort, a
Hudson's Bay Company fort built in 1786, and of
his decision to send a party to trade in the
interior. There is abundant evidence of the great
part played by strong drink at this time in the
fur country.
"Cotton Shirt, a haughty
Indian chief, has always been very faithful to me
these several years past. He is, without
exception, the best hunter in the whole
department, and passes as having in consequence
great influence over me. One of his elder brothers
spoke next and said that he was now grown up to a
man; that 'his fort,' as he calls Osnaburgh, was
too far off for the winter trade ; that if I left
anyone here, he would come to them with winter
skins; ho could not live without getting drunk
three or four times at least, but that I must
leave a clerk to deal with him, as he was above
trading with any young under-strappers. I told him
that if I consented to leave a person here, I
would leave one that had both sense and knowledge
enough to know how to use him well, as also any
other great man. This Indian had been spoiled by
the H. B. people at Osnaburgh Fort, where we may
consider him master. He had been invited to dine
there last spring."
"This great English partisan,
a few weeks ago, had his nose bit off by his
son-in-law at the door of what he calls 'his
fort.' He is not yet cured, and says that a great
man like him must not get angry or take any
revenge, especially when he stands in awe of the
one who ill-used him, for there is nothing an
Indian will not do rather than admit himself to be
a coward."
"My canoe was very much
hampered; I put a man and his wife in the small
canoe and embarked in the other small canoe with
my guides, after giving some liquor to the old man
and his sons, who must remain here to-day to try
and pack all their three canoes. We went on as
well as we could against a cold head wind till the
big canoe got on a stone which nearly upset her
and tore a piece two feet square out of her
bottom. She filled immediately and the men and
goods were all in danger of going to the bottom
before they reached the shore; notwithstanding
their efforts, she sank in three feet of water. We
hastened to get everything out of her, but my
sugar and their molasses were damaged, but worse
than all, my powder, which I immediately examined,
was considerably damaged."
"Having decided to establish
a fort, we all set to work ; four men to build,
one to square boards for the doors, timber for the
floors, and shelves for the shops, the two others
to attend the rest. . . . There are now eight
Indians here, all drunk and very troublesome to my
neighbour, who, I believe, is as drunk as
themselves; they are all very civil to me, and so
they may, for I am giving them plenty to drink,
without getting anything from them as yet."
"This man (an Indian from Red
Lake) tells me that the English (H. B. Co.), the X
Y, and Mr. Adhemar (a free trader) were striving
who would squander the most and thereby please the
Indians best, but the consequence will be that the
Indians will get all they want for half the value
and laugh at them all, in the end. He told me that
an Indian, who I know very well to have no
influence on anyone but himself, got five kegs of
mixt high wines to himself alone between the three
houses and took 200 skins credit; that all the
Indians were fifteen days without getting sober. I
leave it to any rational being to judge what that
Indian's skins will cost."
"Another circumstance which
will tend to injure the trade very much, so long
as we have the Hudson's Bay Company against us, is
the premium they allow every factor or master on
whatever number of skins they obtain. Those people
do not care at what price they buy or whether
their employes gain by them, so long as they have
their premium, which sets them in opposition to
one another almost as much as they are to us. The
honourable Hudson's Bay Company proprietors very
little knew their own interest when they first
allowed this interest to their 'officers,' as they
call them, as it certainly had not the desired
effect, for, if it added some to their exertions,
it led in a great degree to the squandering of
their goods, as they are in general both needy and
selfish."
PETER GRANT, THE
HISTORIOGRAPHER.
While many journals and
sketches were forwarded to Mr. Roderick McKenzie,
none of them were of so high a character in
completeness and style as that of Mr. Peter Grant
on the Saulteaux Indians. Peter Grant, as quite a
young man at the age of twenty, joined the
North-West Company in 1784. Seven years afterward
he had become a partner, had charge of Rainy Lake
district, and afterward that of the Red River
department. His sketch of the Indians marks him as
a keen observer and a facile writer. Some of his
descriptions are excellent:—
"The fruits found in this
country are the wild plum, a small sort of wild
cherry, wild currants of different kinds,
gooseberries, strawberries, raspberries,
brambleberries, blackberries, choke cherries, wild
grapes, sand cherries, a delicious fruit which
grows on a small shrub near sandy shores, and
another blueberry, a fine fruit not larger than a
currant, tasting much like a pear and growing on a
small tree about the size of a willow. (No doubt
the Saskatoon berry.—Ed,) In the swamp you find
two kinds of cranberries. Hazel nuts, but of very
inferior quality, grow near the banks of the
rivers and lakes. A kind of wild rice grows
spontaneously in the small muddy creeks and bays."
"The North-West Company's
canoes, manned with five men, carry about 3,000
lbs.; they seldom draw more than eighteen inches
of water and go generally at the rate of six miles
an hour in calm weather. When arrived at a
portage, the bowman instantly jumps in the water
to prevent the canoe from touching the bottom,
while the others tie their slings to the packages
in the canoe and swing them on their backs to
carry over the portage. The bowman and the
steersman carry their canoe, a duty from which the
middle men are exempt. The whole is conducted with
astonishing expedition, a necessary consequence of
the enthusiasm which always attends their long and
perilous voyages. It is pleasing to see them, when
the weather is calm and serene, paddling in their
canoes, singing in chorus their simple, melodious
strains, and keeping exact time with their
paddles, which effectually beguiles their labours.
When they arrive at a rapid, the guide or
foreman's business is to explore the waters
previous to their running down with their canoes,
and, according to the height of the water, they
either lighten the canoe by taking out part of the
cargo and carry it overland, or run down the whole
load."
Speaking of the Saulteaux,
Grant says, "The Saulteaux are, in general, of the
common stature, well proportioned, though
inclining to a slender make, which would indicate
more agility than strength. Their complexion is a
whitish cast of the copper colour, their hair
black, long, straight, and of a very strong
texture, the point of the nose rather flat, and a
certain fulness in the lips, but not sufficient to
spoil the appearance of the mouth. The teeth, of a
beautiful ivory white, are regular, well set, and
seldom fail them even in the most advanced period
of life; their cheeks are high and rather
prominent, their eyes black and lively, their
countenance is generally pleasant, and the
symmetry of their features is such as to
constitute what can be called handsome faces.
"Their passions, whether of a
benevolent or mischievous tendency, are always
more violent than ours. I believe this has been
found to be the case with all barbarous nations
who never cultivate the mind; hence the cruelties
imputed to savages, in general, towards their
enemies. Though these people cannot be acquitted
from some degree of that ferocious barbarity which
characterizes the savages, they are, however, free
from that deliberate cruelty which has been so
often imputed to other barbarous natives. They are
content to kill and scalp their enemy, and never
reserve a prisoner for the refined tortures of a
lingering and cruel death."
"The Saulteaux have, properly
speaking, no regular system of government and but
a very imperfect idea of the different ranks of
society so absolutely necessary in all civilized
countries. Their loading men or chief magistrates
are petty chiefs, whoso dignity is hereditary, but
whoso authority is confined within the narrow
circle of their own particular tribe or relatives.
There are no established laws to enforce
obedience; all is voluntary, and yet, such is
their confidence and respect for their chiefs,
that instances of mutiny or disobedience to orders
are very rare among them.
"As to religion, Gitche
Manitou, or the 'Master of Life,' claims the first
rank in their devotion. To him they attribute the
creation of the heavens, of the waters, and of
that portion of the earth beyond the sea from
which white people come. He is also the author of
life and death, taking pleasure in promoting the
happiness of the virtuous, and having, likewise,
the power of punishing the wicked. Wiskendjac is
next in power. He is said to be the creator of all
the Indian tribes, the country they inhabit and
all it contains. The last of their deities is
called Matchi-Manitou, or the 'Bad Spirit.' He is
the author of evil, but subject to the control of
the Gitche Manitou. Though he is Justly held in
great detestation, it is thought good policy to
smooth his anger by singing and beating the drum.
"When life is gone, the body
of the dead is addressed by some friend of the
deceased in a long speech, in which he begs of him
to take courage, and pursue his Journey to the
Great Meadow, observing that all his departed
friends and relations are anxiously waiting to
receive him, and that his surviving friends will
soon follow.
"The body is then decently
dressed and wrapped in a new blanket, with new
shoes, garnished and painted with vermilion, on
the feet. It is kept one night in the lodge, and
is next day buried in the earth. After burial they
either raise a pole of wood over the grave, or
enclose it with a fence. At the head of the grave
a small post is erected, on which they carve the
particular mark of the tribe to whom the deceased
belonged. The bodies of some of their most
celebrated chiefs are raised upon a high scaffold,
with flags flying, and the scalps of their
enemies. It is customary with their warriors, at
the funeral of their great men, to strike the post
and relate all their martial achievements, as they
do in the war dance, and their funeral ceremonies
generally conclude by a feast round the grave."
Grant, in 1794, built the
post on the Assiniboine at the mouth of Shell
River, and five years afterward was in charge of
the fort on the Rainy Lake. About the same time he
erected a post, probably the first on the Red
River, in the neighbourhood of the present village
of St. Vincent, near 49° N. Lat., opposite
Pembina. He seems to have been in the Indian
country in 1804, and, settling in Lower Canada,
died at Lachine in 1848, at the grand old age of
eighty-four.
Thus have we sought to
sketch, from their own writings, pictures of the
lords of the fur trade. They were a remarkable
body of men. Great as financiers, marvellous as
explorers, facile as traders, bravo in their
spirits, firm and yet tactful in their management
of the Indians, and, except during the short
period from 1800-1804, anxious for the welfare of
the Red men. Looking back, we wonder at their
daring and loyalty, and can well say with
Washington Irving, "The feudal state of Fort
William is at an end ; its council chamber is
silent and desolate; its banquet-hall no longer
echoes to the auld world ditty ; the lords of the
lakes and forests have passed away."