A great land Company—Fort Garry dismantled—The new buildings
—New v. Old—New life in the Company—Palmy days are recalled
—Governors of ability—The present distinguished Governor—
Vaster operations—Its eye not dimmed.
Relieved of the burden of government, the
Hudson's Bay Company threw itself heartily into the work of
developing its resources. Mr. Donald A. Smith, who had done so
much to undermine the power of Riel, returned to Manitoba as
Chief Commissioner of the Company, and proceeded to manage its
affairs in the altered conditions of the country. Representing
enormous interests in the North-West, Mr. Smith entered the
first local legislature at Winnipeg, and soon after became for
a time a member of the Canadian House of Commons. One of the
most important matters needing attention was the land
interests of the Company. The Company claimed five hundred
acres around Fort Garry. This great tract of land, covering
now one of the most important parts of the City of Winnipeg,
was used as a camping-ground, where the traders from the far
west posts, even as far as Edmonton, made their "corrals" and
camped during their stay at the capital. Some opposition was
developed to this claim, but the block of land was at length
handed over to the Company, fifty acres being reserved for
public purposes.
The allotment of wild land to the Company
of one-twentieth went on in each township as it was surveyed,
and though all this land is taxable, yet it has become a great
source of revenue to the Company. Important sites and parcels
of land all over the country have helped to swell its
resources.
The
great matter of adapting its agencies to meet the changed
conditions of trade was a difficult thing. The methods of two
centuries could not be changed in a day. The greatest
difficulty lay in the officers and men remote from the
important centres. It was reported that in many of the posts
no thorough method of book-keeping prevailed. The
dissatisfaction arising from the sale made by the Company in
1863, and the uncertainty as to the deed poll, no doubt
introduced an element of fault-finding and discontent into the
Company's business. Some of the most trusted officers retired
from the service. The resources of the Company were, however,
enormous, its credit being practically unlimited, and this
gave it a great advantage in competing with the Canadian
merchants coming to the country, the majority of whom had
little capital. Ten years after the transfer Fort Garry was
sold, and though it came back on the hands of the Company, yet
miserabile dictu the fort had been dismantled, thrown down,
and even the stone removed, with the exception of the front
gate, which still remains. This gate, with a portion of ground
about it, has been given by the Hudson's Bay Company to the
City of Winnipeg as a small historic park. Since the time of
sale, large warehouses have been erected, not filled, as were
the old shops, with bright coloured cloths, moccasins, and
beads, fitted for the Indian and native trade, but aiming at
full departments after the model of Maple and Shoolbred, of
the mother city of London. These shops are represented in the
plate accompanying this description.
The trade thus modified has been under
the direction of men of ability, who succeeded Mr. Donald A.
Smith, such as Messrs. Wrigley, Brydges, and a number of able
subordinates. The extension of trade has gone on in many of
the rising towns of the Canadian West, where the Hudson's Bay
Company was not before represented, such as Portage La
Prairie, Calgary, Lethbridge, Prince Albert, Vancouver, &c. In
all these points the Company's influence has been a very real
and important one.
The methods of trade, now employed,
require a skill and knowledge never needed in the old
fur-trading days. The present successful Commissioner, C. C.
Chipman, Esq., resident in Winnipeg, controls and directs
interests far greater than Sir George Simpson was called upon
to deal with. Present and Past presents a contrast between
ceaseless competition and a sleepy monopoly.
The portions of the country not reached,
or likely to be reached by settlement, have remained in
possession of the Hudson's Bay Company almost solely. The
Canadian Government has negotiated treaties with the Indians
as far north as Lake Athabasca, leaving many of the Chipewyans
and Eskimos still to the entire management of the Company.
The impression among the officers of the
Company is that under the deed poll of 1871 they are not so
well remunerated as under the former regime. It is difficult
to estimate the exact relation of the present to the past,
inasmuch as the opening up of the country, the improvement of
transportation facilities, and the cheapening of all
agricultural supplies has changed the relative value of money
in the country. Under this arrangement, which has been in
force for twenty-four years, the profits of the wintering
partners are divided on the basis of one-hundredth of a share.
Of this an inspecting chief factor receives three shares; a
chief factor two and a half; a factor two; and a chief trader
one and a half shares. The average for the twenty-five years
of the one-hundredth share has been 213l. 12s. 2½d. Since 1890
a more liberal provision has been made for officers retiring,
and since that time an officer on withdrawing in good standing
receives two years' full pay and six years' half pay. Later
years have seen a further increase.
A visit to the Hudson's Bay House on the
corner of Leaden-hall and Lime Streets, London, still gives
one a sense of the presence of the old Company. While in the
New World great changes have taken place, and the visitor is
struck with the complete departure from the low-ceiling store,
with goods in disorder and confusion, with Metis smoking "kinni-kinnik
" till the atmosphere is opaque—all this to the palatial
buildings with the most perfect arrangements and greatest
taste; yet in London "the old order changeth" but slowly. It
is true the old building on Fenchurch Street, London, where
"the old Lady" was said by the Nor'-Westers to sit, was sold
in 1859, and the proceeds divided among the shareholders and
officers for four years thereafter. But the portraits of
Prince Rupert, Sir George Simpson, and the copy of the Company
Charter were transferred bodily to the directors' room in the
building on Lime Street. The strong room contains the same
rows of minutes, the same dusty piles of documents, and the
journals of bygone years, but the business of a vast region is
still managed there, and the old gentlemen who control the
Hudson's Bay Company affairs pass their dividends as com-fortably
as in years gone by, with, in an occasional year, some
restless spirit stirring up the echoes, to be promptly
repressed and the current of events to go on as before.
Since 1871, however, it is easy to see
that men of greater financial ability have been at the head of
the councils of the Hudson's Bay Company, recalling the palmy
days of the first operations of the Company. After five years'
service, Sir Edmund Head, the first Governor under the new
deed poll, gave way, to be followed for a year by the
distinguished politician and statesman, the Earl of Kimberley.
For five years thereafter, Sir Stafford Northcote, who held
high Government office in the service of the Empire, occupied
this position. He was followed for six years by one who has
since gained a very high reputation for financial ability, the
Rt. Hon. G. J. Goschen. Eden Colville, who seems to carry us
back to the former generation—a man of brisk and alert mind,
and singularly free from the prejudices and immobility of
Governor Berens, the last of the barons of the old regime—held
office for -three years after Mr. Goschen.
For the last ten years the veteran of
kindly manner, warm heart, and genial disposition, Lord
Strathcona and Mount Royal, has occupied this high place. The
clerk, junior officer, and chief factor of thirty hard years
on the inhospitable shores of Hudson Bay and Labrador, the
Commissioner who, as Donald A. Smith, soothed the Riel
rebellion, and for years directed the reorganization of the
Company's affairs at Fort Garry and the whole North-West, the
daring speculator who took hold, with his friends, of the
Minnesota and Manitoba Railway, and with Midas touch turned
the enterprise to gold, a projector and a builder of the
Canadian Pacific Railway, the patron of art and education, has
worthily filled the office of Governor of the Hudson's Bay
Company, and with much success reorganized its administration
and directed its affairs. The Company's operations are vaster
than ever before. The greatest mercantile enterprise of the
Greater Canada west of Lake Superior; a strong land Company,
still keeping up its traditions and conducting a large trade
in furs; owning vessels and transportation facilities; able to
take large contracts; exercising a fatherly care over the
Indian tribes; the helper and assistant of the vast missionary
organizations scattered over Northern Canada, the Company
since the transfer of Rupert's Land to Canada has taken a new
lease of life; its eye is not dim, nor its natural force
abated.