Harmon and his book—An honest 
							man—"Straight as an arrow"— New views—An uncouth 
							giant—"Gaelic, English, French, and Indian 
							oaths"—McDonnell, "Le Pretre"—St. Andrew's Day— 
							"Fathoms of tobacco"—Down the Assiniboine—An 
							entertaining journal—A good editor—A too frank 
							trader—"Gun fired ten yards away"—Herds of 
							buffalo—Packs and pemmican—"The fourth 
							Gospel"—Drowning of Henry—"The weather cleared up 
							"—Lost for forty days—"Cheepe," the corpse—Larocque 
							and the Mandans—McKenzie and his half-breed 
							children.
 
							
							
							A GOOD TRADER AND A GOOD BOOK.
							
							To those interested in the 
							period we are describing there is not a more 
							attractive character than Daniel Williams Harmon, a 
							native of Vermont, who entered the North-West 
							Company's service in the year 1800, at the age of 
							22. After a number of years spent in the far West, 
							he brought with him on a visit to New England the 
							journal of his adventures, and this was edited and 
							published by a Puritan minister, Daniel Haskel, of 
							Andover, Massachusetts. Harmon and the book are both 
							somewhat striking, though possibly neither would 
							draw forth universal admiration. The youngest of his 
							daughters was well known as a prominent citizen of 
							Ottawa, and had a marked reverence for the memory of 
							her father.
							
							Leaving Lachine in the service 
							of McTavish, Frobisher & Co., the young fur trader 
							followed the usual route up the Ottawa and reached 
							in due course Grand Portage, which he called "the 
							general rendezvous for the fur traders." He thus 
							describes the fort: "It is twenty-four rods by 
							thirty, is built on the margin of the Bay, at the 
							foot of a hill or mountain of considerable height. 
							Within the fort there is a considerable number of 
							dwelling-houses, shops, and stores; the houses are 
							surrounded by palisades, which are about eighteen 
							inches in diameter. The other fort, which stands 
							about 200 rods from this, belongs to the X Y 
							Company. It is only three years since they made an 
							establishment here, and as yet they have had but 
							little success." Harmon was appointed to follow John 
							McDonald, of Garth, to the Upper Saskatchewan. On 
							the way out, however, Harmon was ordered to the Swan 
							River district. Here he remained for four years, 
							taking a lively interest in all the parts of a 
							trader's life. He was much on the Assiniboine, and 
							passed the sites of Brandon, Portage la Prairie, and 
							Winnipeg of to-day.
							
							In October, 1805, Harmon, 
							having gone to the Saskatchewan, took as what was 
							called his "country wife" a French Canadian 
							half-breed girl, aged fourteen. He states that it 
							was the custom of the country for the trader to take 
							a wife from the natives, live with her in the 
							country, and then, on leaving the country, place her 
							and her children under the care of an honest man and 
							give a certain amount for her support. As a matter 
							of fact, Harmon, years after, on leaving the 
							country, took his native spouse with him, and on 
							Lake Champlain some of his younger children were 
							born. There were fourteen children born to him, and 
							his North-West wife was to her last days a handsome 
							woman, "as straight as an arrow."
							
							During Harmon's time Athabasca 
							had not only the X Y Company, but also a number of 
							forts of the Hudson's Bay Company. Cumberland House 
							was the next place of residence of the fur trader, 
							and at this point the Hudson's Bay Company house was 
							in charge of Peter Fidler. Harmon's journal 
							continues with most interesting details of the fur 
							trade, which have the charm of liveliness and 
							novelty. Allusions are constantly made to the 
							leading traders, McDonald, Fraser, Thompson, Quesnel, 
							Stuart, and others known to us in our researches. In 
							the course of time (1810) Harmon found his way over 
							the Rocky Mountain portage and pursued the fur trade 
							in McLeod Lake Fort and Stuart's Lake in New 
							Caledonia, and here we find a fort called, after 
							him, Harmon's Fort. His description of the Indians 
							is always graphic, giving many striking customs of 
							the aborigines. About the end of 1813 Harmon's 
							journal is taken up with serious religious 
							reflections. He had been troubled with doubts as to 
							the reality of Christianity. But after reading the 
							Scriptures and such books as he could obtain, he 
							tells us that a new view of things was his, and that 
							his future life became more consistent and useful. 
							He records us a series of the resolutions which he 
							adopted, and they certainly indicate a high ideal on 
							his part.
							
							In 1816 he had really become 
							habituated to the upper country. He gives us a 
							glimpse of his family :—
							
							"I now pass a short time every 
							day, very pleasantly, in teaching my little daughter 
							Polly to read and spell words in the English 
							language, in which she makes good progress, though 
							she knows not the meaning of one of them. In 
							conversing with my children I use entirely the Cree 
							Indian language; with their mother I more frequently 
							employ the French. Her native tongue, however, is 
							more familiar to her, which is the reason why our 
							children have been taught to speak that in 
							preference to the French language." In his journal, 
							which at times fully shows his introspections, he 
							gives an account of the struggle in his own mind 
							about leaving his wife in the country, as was the 
							custom of too many of the clerks and partners. He 
							had instructed her in the principles of 
							Christianity, and by these principles he was bound 
							to her for life. After eight and a half years spent 
							on the west side of the Rocky Mountains, Harmon 
							arrived at Fort William, 1819, having made a journey 
							of three thousand miles from his far-away post in 
							New Caledonia. Montreal was soon after reached, and 
							the Journal comes to a close.
							
							A BUSY BOURGEOIS.
							
							We have seen the energy and 
							ability displayed by John McDonald, of Garth, known 
							as "Le Bras Croch." Another trader, John McDonald, 
							is described by Ross Cox, who spent his life largely 
							in the Rocky Mountain region. He was known as 
							McDonald Grand. "He was 6 ft. 4 in. in height, with 
							broad shoulders, large bushy whiskers, and red hair, 
							which he allowed to grow for years without the use 
							of scissors, and which sometimes, falling over his 
							face and shoulders, gave to his countenance a wild 
							and uncouth appearance." He had a most 
							uncontrollable temper, and in his rage would indulge 
							in a wild medley of Gaelic, English, French, and 
							Indian oaths.
							
							But a third John McDonnell was 
							found among the fur traders. He was a brother of 
							Miles McDonnell, Lord Selkirk's first governor of 
							the Red River Settlement. John McDonnell was a rigid 
							Roman Catholic, and was known as "Le Pretre" ("The 
							Priest"), from the fact that on the voyage through 
							the fur country he always insisted on observing the 
							Church fasts along with his French Canadian employes. 
							McDonnell, on leaving the service of the North-West 
							Company, retired to Point Fortune, on the Ottawa, 
							and there engaged in trade.
							
							We have his journal for the 
							years 1793-5, and it is an excellent example of what 
							a typical fur trader's Journal would be. It is 
							minute, accurate, and very interesting. During this 
							period he spent his time chiefly in trading up and 
							down the Assiniboine and Red Rivers. A few extracts 
							will show the interesting nature of his journal 
							entries :—
							
							Fort Esperance, Oct. 18th, 
							1793.—Neil McKay set out to build and winter at the 
							Forks of the river (junction of the Qu'Appelle and 
							Assiniboine), alongside of Mr. Peter Grant, who has 
							made his pitch about seven leagues from here. Mr. N. 
							McKay's effects were carried in two boats, managed 
							by five men each. Mr. C. Grant set out for his 
							quarters of River Tremblant, about thirty leagues 
							from here. The dogs made a woeful howling at all the 
							departures.
							
							Oct. 19th.—Seventeen warriors 
							came from the banks of the Missouri for tobacco. 
							They slept ten nights on their way, and are 
							emissaries from a party of Assiniboines who went to 
							war upon the Sioux.
							
							Oct. 20th.—The warriors traded 
							a few skins brought upon their backs and went off 
							ill pleased with their reception. After dark, the 
							dogs kept up a constant barking, which induced a 
							belief that some of the warriors were lurking about 
							the fort for an opportunity to steal. I took a sword 
							and pistol and went to sleep in the store. Nothing 
							took place. 
							
							
							
							Oct. 31st.—Two of Mr. N. 
							McKay's men came from the forts, supposing this to 
							be All Saints' Day. Raised a flag-staff poplar, 
							fifty feet above the ground.
							
							Nov. 23rd.—The men were in 
							chase of a white buffalo all day, but could not get 
							within shot of him. Faignant killed two buffalo 
							cows. A mild day.
							
							Nov. 30th.—St. Andrew's Day. 
							Hoisted the flag in honour of the titulary saint of 
							Scotland. A beautiful day. Expected Messrs. Peter 
							Grant and Neil McKay to dinner. They sent excuse by 
							Bonneau.
							
							Dec. 2nd.—Sent Mr. Peter Grant 
							a Town and Country magazine of 1790. Poitras' wife 
							made me nine pairs of shoes (mocassins).
							
							Jan. 1st, 1794.—Mr. Grant gave 
							the men two gallons of rum and three fathoms of 
							tobacco, by the way of New Year's gift. (It is 
							interesting to follow McDonnell on one of his 
							journeys down the Assiniboine.)
							
							May 1st.—Sent off the canoes 
							early in the morning. Mr. Grant and I set out about 
							seven. Slept at the Forks of River Qu'Appelle.
							
							May 4th.—Killed four buffalo 
							cows and two calves and camped below the Fort of 
							Mountain à La Bosse (near Virden), about two 
							leagues.
							
							May 5th.—Arrived at Ange's 
							River La Souris Fort (below Brandon).
							
							May l7th.—Passed Fort Des 
							Trembles and Portage La Prairie.
							
							May 20th.—Arrived at the Forks 
							Red River (present city of Winnipeg) about noon.
							
							May 24th.—Arrived at the Lake 
							(Winnipeg) at 10 a.m.
							
							May 27th.—Arrived at the 
							Sieur's Fort (Fort Alexander at the mouth of 
							Winnipeg River).
							
							McDonnell also gives in his 
							journal a number of particulars about the Cree and 
							Assiniboine Indians, describing their religion, 
							marriages, dress, dances, and mourning. The reader 
							is struck with the difference in the recital by 
							different traders of the lives lived by them. The 
							literary faculty is much more developed in some 
							cases than in others, and John McDonnell was 
							evidently an observing and quick-witted man. He 
							belonged to a U. E. Loyalist Scottish family that 
							took a good position in the affairs of early Canada. 
							
							
							
							A FULL AND INTERESTING 
							AUTOBIOGRAPHY. 
							
							
							
							That the first trader of the 
							North-West whom we have described, Alexander Henry, 
							should have been followed in the North-West fur 
							trade by his nephew, Alexander Henry, Jr., is in 
							itself a thing of interest; but that the younger 
							Henry should have left us a most voluminous and 
							entertaining journal is a much greater matter.
							
							The copy of this journal is in 
							the Parliamentary Library at Ottawa, and forms two 
							large bound folio volumes of 1,642 pages. It is not 
							the original, but is a well-approved copy made in 
							1824 by George Coventry, of Montreal. For many years 
							this manuscript has been in the Parliamentary 
							Library, and extracts have been made and printed. 
							Recently an American writer, Dr. Coues, who has done 
							good service in editing the notable work of Lewis 
							and Clark, and also that of Zebulon S. Pike, has 
							published a digest of Henry's journal and added to 
							it very extensive notes of great value. The greatest 
							praise is due to this author for the skill with 
							which he has edited the journal, and all students of 
							the period are indebted to one so well fitted to 
							accomplish the task.
							
							The journal opens, in 1799, 
							with Henry on the waters of a tributary of Lake 
							Manitoba, he having arrived from Grand Portage by 
							the usual fur traders' route. In this place he built 
							a trading house and spent his first winter. In the 
							following year the trader is found on the Red River 
							very near the forty-ninth parallel of north 
							latitude, and is engaged in establishing a post at 
							the mouth of the Pembina River, a tributary of Red 
							River. At this post Henry remains until 1808, going 
							hither and thither in trading expeditions, 
							establishing new outposts, counter-working the rival 
							traders of the X Y Company, and paying his visits 
							from time to time to Grand Portage.
							
							Henry's entries are made with 
							singular clearness and realistic force. He recites 
							with the utmost frankness the details of drunken 
							debauchery among the Indians, the plots of one 
							company to outdo the other in trading with the 
							Indians, and the tricks of trade so common at this 
							period in the fur trade.
							
							A few examples of his graphic 
							descriptions may be given. 
							
							
							
							"At ten o'clock I came to the 
							point of wood in which the fort was built, and just 
							as I entered the gate at a gallop, to take the road 
							that led to the gate, a gun was fired about ten 
							yards from me, apparently by a person who lay in the 
							long grass. My horse was startled and jumped on one 
							side, snorting and prancing; but I kept my seat, 
							calling out, 'Who is there?' No answer was returned. 
							I instantly took my gun from my belt, and cocked her 
							to fire, forgetting she was not loaded and I had no 
							ammunition. I could still see the person running in 
							the grass, and was disappointed in not having a shot 
							at him. I again called out, 'Who is there?' 'C'est 
							moi, bourgeois.' It proved to be one of my men, 
							Charbonneau. I was vexed with him for causing me 
							such consternation."
							
							RED RIVER.
							
							"February 28th, 1801.—Wolves 
							and crows are very numerous, feeding on the buffalo 
							carcasses that lie in every direction. I shot two 
							buffalo cows, a calf, and two bulls, and got home 
							after dark. I was choking with thirst, having chased 
							the buffalo on snow-shoes in the heat of the day, 
							when the snow so adheres that one is scarcely able 
							to raise the feet. A draught of water was the 
							sweetest beverage I ever tasted. An Indian brought 
							in a calf of this year, which he found dead. It was 
							well grown, and must have perished last night in the 
							snow. This was thought extraordinary; they say it 
							denotes an early spring.
							
							"March 5th.—The buffalo have 
							for some time been wandering in every direction. My 
							men have raised and put their traps in order for the 
							spring hunt, as the raccoons begin to come out of 
							their winter quarters in the daytime, though they 
							retire to the hollow trees at night. On the 8th it 
							rained for four hours; fresh meat thawed. On the 9th 
							we saw the first spring bird. Bald eagles we have 
							seen the whole winter, but now they are numerous, 
							feeding on the buffalo carcasses."
							
							During the Red River period 
							Henry made a notable journey in 1806 across the 
							plains to the Mandans on the Missouri. Two years 
							afterward he bids farewell to Red River and the 
							Assiniboine, and goes to carry on trade in the 
							Saskatchewan. While on the Saskatchewan, which was 
							for three years, he was in charge of important 
							forts, viz. Fort Vermilion, Terre Blanche, and the 
							Rocky Mountain House. His energy and acquaintance 
							with the prairie were well shown in his exploration 
							of this great region, and the long journeys 
							willingly undertaken by him. His account of the 
							western prairies, especially of the Assiniboines, is 
							complete and trustworthy. In fact, he rejoices in 
							supplying us with the details of their lives and 
							manners which we might well be spared.
							
							A gap of two years from 1811 is 
							found in Henry's journal, but it is resumed in 1813, 
							the year in which he crosses the Rocky Mountains and 
							is found in the party sent by the North-West Company 
							to check the encroachments on the Columbia of the 
							Astor Fur Company. His account of the voyage on the 
							Pacific is regarded as valuable, and Dr. Coues says 
							somewhat quaintly: "His work is so important a 
							concordance that if Franchere, Cox, and Ross be 
							regarded as the synoptical writers of Astoria, then 
							Henry furnishes the fourth Gospel."
							
							After the surrender of Astoria 
							to the North-West Company and its occupation by the 
							British, some of the Nor'-Westers returned. John 
							McDonald, of Garth, as we have seen, crossed the 
							mountains. In his journal occurs a significant 
							entry: "Mr. la Rogue brings the melancholy 
							intelligence that Messrs. D. McTavish, Alexander 
							Henry, and five sailors were drowned on May 22nd 
							last, in going out in a boat from Fort George to the 
							vessel called the Isaac Todd." Ross Cox gives a 
							circumstantial account of this sad accident, though, 
							strange to say, he does not mention the name of 
							Henry, while giving that of D. McTavish.
							
							It is somewhat startling to us 
							to find that Henry continued his journal up to the 
							very day before his death, his last sentence being, 
							"The weather cleared up."
							
							A TRADER LOST FOR FORTY DAYS.
							
							Lying before the writer is the 
							copy of a letter of John Pritchard, of the X Y 
							Company, written in 1805, giving an account of a 
							forty days' adventure of a most thrilling kind. 
							Pritchard was in charge of the X Y Fort at the mouth 
							of the Souris River on the Assiniboine. He had on 
							June 10th gone with one of the clerks up the River 
							Assiniboine, intending to reach Qu'Appelle Fort, a 
							distance of 120 miles. All went well till Montagne à 
							la Bosse was reached, where there was a trading 
							house. Going westward, the two traders were 
							separated in looking for the horses. Pritchard lit 
							fires for two days, but could attract no attention. 
							Then he realized that he was lost. Misled by the 
							belts of timber along the different streams, he went 
							along the Pipestone, thinking ho was going towards 
							the Assiniboine. In this he was mistaken. Painfully 
							he crept along the river, his strength having nearly 
							gone. Living on frogs, two hawks, and a few other 
							birds, he says at the end of ten days, "I perceived 
							my body completely wasted. Nothing was left me but 
							my bones, covered with a skin thinner than paper. I 
							was perfectly naked, my clothes having been worn in 
							making shoes, with which I protected my bruised and 
							bleeding feet."
							
							Some days after, Pritchard 
							found a nest of small eggs and lived on them. He 
							says, "How mortifying to mo to see the buffalo 
							quenching their thirst in every lake near to which I 
							slept, and geese and swans in abundance, whilst I 
							was dying of hunger in this land of plenty, for want 
							of wherewith to kill." After trying to make a hook 
							and line to fish, and failing ; after being tempted 
							to lie down and give up life, he caught a hen 
							grouse, which greatly strengthened him, as ho cooked 
							and ate it. He had now crossed the Souris River, 
							thinking it to be the Assiniboine, and came upon a 
							great plain where the prairie turnip (Psoralea 
							esculenta) grew plentifully. Pushing southward, 
							being sustained by the bulbs of this "pomme 
							blanche," as it is called by the French voyageurs, 
							Pritchard came at length to Whitewater Lake, near 
							Turtle Mountain, and here found two vacant wintering 
							houses of the fur traders. Ho now was able to 
							identify his locality and to estimate that he was 
							sixty miles directly south of his trading post. His 
							feet, pierced by the spear grass (Stipa spartea), 
							were now in a dreadful condition. He found a pair of 
							old shoes in the vacant fort and several pairs of 
							socks.
							
							He determined to move northward 
							to his fort. Soon he was met by a band of Indians, 
							who were alarmed at his worn appearance. The natives 
							took good care of him and carried him, at times 
							unconscious, to his fort, which he reached after an 
							absence of forty days. He says, "Picture to yourself 
							a man whose bones are scraped, not an atom of flesh 
							remaining, then over these bones a loose skin, fine 
							as the bladder of an animal; a beard of forty days' 
							growth, his hair full of filth and scabs. You will 
							then have some idea of what I was." The Hudson's Bay 
							Company officer, McKay, from the neighbouring fort, 
							was exceedingly kind and supplied his every want.
							
							The Cree Indians after this 
							adventure called Pritchard the Manitou or Great 
							Spirit. The Assiniboines called him Cheepe —or the 
							corpse, referring to his wan appearance. For weeks 
							after his return the miserable trader was unable to 
							move about, but in time recovered, and lived to a 
							good old age on the banks of the Red River.
							
							To the last day of his life he 
							referred to his great deliverance, and was 
							thoroughly of the opinion that his preservation was 
							miraculous.
							
							ASSINIBOINE TO MISSOURI.
							
							We are fortunate in having two 
							very good journals of journeys made in the early 
							years of the century from the forts at the junction 
							of the Souris and Assiniboine River to the Missouri 
							River. As was described in the case of David 
							Thompson, this was a long and tedious journey, and 
							yet it was at one time within the plans of the 
							North-West Company to carry their trade thither. Few 
							of the French Canadian gentlemen entered into the 
							North-West Company. One of these, who became noted 
							as an Indian trader, was Francois Antoine Larocque, 
							brother-in-law of Quesnel, the companion of Simon 
							Fraser. Of the same rank as himself, and associated 
							with Mm, was a trader, Charles McKenzie, who entered 
							the North-West Company as a clerk in 1803.
							
							The expedition to the Mandans 
							under these gentlemen, left Fort Assiniboine on 
							November 11th, 1804, a party in all of seven, and 
							provided with horses, five of which carried 
							merchandise for trade. After the usual incidents of 
							this trying journey, the Missouri was reached.
							
							The notable event of this 
							journey was the meeting with the American expedition 
							of Lewis and Clark, then on its way to cross 
							overland to the Pacific Ocean. Larocque in his 
							journal gives information about this expedition. 
							Leaving Philadelphia in 1803, the expedition, 
							consisting of upward of forty men, had taken till 
							October to reach the Mandans on the Missouri. The 
							purposes of the expedition of Lewis and Clark were 
							:—
							
							(1) To explore the territory 
							towards the Pacific and settle the boundary line 
							between the British and American territories.
							
							(2) To quiet the Indians of the 
							Missouri by conference and the bestowment of gifts.
							
							Larocque was somewhat annoyed 
							by the message given him by Lewis and Clark, that no 
							flags or medals could be given by the North-West 
							Company to the Indians in the Missouri, inasmuch as 
							they were American Indians. Larocque had some 
							amusement at the continual announcement by these 
							leaders that the Indians would be protected so long 
							as they should behave as dutiful children to the 
							great father, the President of the United States. In 
							the spring the party returned, after wintering on 
							the Missouri. In 1805, during the summer, another 
							expedition went to the Missouri; in 1806, Charles 
							McKenzie went in February to the Mandans, and, 
							returning, made a second journey in the same year to 
							the Missouri. The account given by McKenzie of the 
							Journeys of 1804-6 is an exceedingly well written 
							one, for this leader was fond of study, and, we are 
							told, delighted especially in the history of his 
							native land, the highlands of Scotland.
							
							Charles McKenzie had married an 
							Indian woman, and became thoroughly identified with 
							the North-West. He was fond of his native children, 
							and stood up for their recognition on the same plane 
							as the white children. After the union of the 
							North-West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company, the 
							English influence largely prevailed. Thinking that 
							his son, who was well educated at the Red River 
							Seminary, was not sufficiently recognized by the 
							Company, McKenzie wrote bitterly, "It appears the 
							present concern has stamped the Cain mark upon all 
							born in this country. Neither education nor 
							abilities serve them. The Honourable Company are 
							unwilling to take natives, even as apprenticed 
							clerks, and the favoured few they do take can never 
							aspire to a higher status, be their education and 
							capacity what they may."
							
							McKenzie continued the fur 
							trade until 1846, when he retired and settled on the 
							Red River. His son, Hector McKenzie, now dead, was 
							well known on the Red River, and accompanied one of 
							the explorations to the far north.
							
							Larocque did not continue long 
							in the fur trade, but went to Montreal and embarked 
							in business, in which he was very unsuccessful. He 
							spent the last years of his life in retirement and 
							close study, and died in the Grey nunnery in a Lower 
							Canadian parish.