Samuel Black

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Samuel Black (May 3, 1780 – February 8, 1841) was a

explorer, a clerk in the New North Nest Company (XYC) and Wintering Partner in the North West Company (NWC), and later clerk, chief trader, and chief factor in the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) for the Columbia District. In 1824, he explored the Finlay River and its tributaries in present-day north-central British Columbia, Canada, including the Muskwa, Omineca and Stikine
for the HBC. His journals were published by the Hudson's Bay Record Society in 1955.

Early life and career

Black was born in Tyrie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, the oldest and only son to John Black, from the parish on Tyrie, and Mary Leith, from the parish of Bodichell.[1] Black also had two sisters, Ann and Mary.[2] His baptism was witnessed by George Leith and Janet Black. It is noted in the baptism record that Black was "illegitimate," though, on June 24, 1781, John Black and Mary Leith are noted in the parish marriage records in Pitsligo as "having been contracted and claimed were married" prior to the birth of Samuel.[3] Black's father died four years after Black's birth.[4]

Black came to Lower Canada (present day Quebec) in 1802 in the service of the XY Company as a clerk, perhaps encouraged by his maternal uncle and fur trader, George Leith, and probably joined the firm of Leith, Jamieson and Company, part of the XYC.[5] He already had relatives living in Canada at the time of his arrival.[6] At the joining of the XYC and NWC in 1804, Black "passed with the Company's organisation,"[7] and went to work for the North West Company, headquartered in Montreal. Assigned to work in the Athabasca Department (mostly in present-day Alberta) in 1805, Black served as a clerk there for fifteen years. For much of this time, he took an active role in the sometimes violent competition between the NWC and the HBC. In 1816, Black was made a NWC Wintering Partner.[8]

By 1820, Black's violent activities against Hudson's Bay Company employees had so imperiled his safety that he withdrew across the Rockies to the North West Company fort at McLeod Lake in New Caledonia, as an arrest had been sworn out for him.

At the merger of the NWC and HBC in 1821, Black violent opposition against the HBC caused him to be one of the few NWC men, along with Peter Skene Ogden, not included in the merger.[9] But in 1823, Black was appointed as a clerk and then Chief Trader to the post at Fort St. John.

Explorations

In the summer of 1824, at the behest of

Russian
fur trade from the west.

The river had been partially explored by

Peace River to the point where it is formed by the Finlay flowing from the north, and the Parsnip River from the south. Mackenzie had taken the Parsnip, and from there completed a complicated route to the Pacific Ocean. It is thought that Finlay may have decided to probe the northern branch of the Peace in order to determine if it afforded a better route to the Pacific than the one taken by Mackenzie. Nonetheless, it would appear from the information Black had that Finlay had only made it as far as the Ingenika River
, about 130 km north of the Finlay River's confluence with the Parsnip (where the Peace begins).

The journey up the Finlay River's 450 km length and up its tributaries, the

Firesteel River, took Black and his men to what is considered the ultimate source of the Mackenzie River at Thutade Lake (at the head of the Firesteel). Proceeding sometimes on foot, sometimes by raft, Black and a smaller crew explored the region of the Spatsizi Plateau, there finding one of the sources of the Stikine River and so reaching the boundary between the Arctic and Pacific drainages. Journeying north-eastward, Black crossed another divide — this time between the Stikine and Liard Rivers — and rafted some way down the Kechika by way of its tributary, the Turnagain River
, before returning again down the Finlay.

Black's vivid journal account of the expedition conveys the extreme hardships faced by the crew, and what Black believed was the general privation of the country — both as a source of food and of furs. Two of his men deserted in the course of the expedition, giving Deserters Canyon its name. The river proved to be a rough and difficult to traverse, and Black's assessment was that this fact — coupled with what he perceived to be the general absence of marketable furs or a healthy First Nations population — made the territory impracticable for the extension of the fur trade or as a northern route to the Pacific. Nonetheless, Black and his crew had completed an extraordinarily extensive survey of what is now north-central British Columbia. They had not only journeyed to the source of the Mackenzie River, but had travelled over the Arctic-Pacific divide, and to the sources of two major watersheds — the Stikine and Liard Rivers.

Later career

After an interval at

Secwepemc (Shuswap) following a minor quarrel.[10][11]
He is interred near Kamloops.

Places named for Black

  • The Finlay River was locally called Black's River by early fur traders, but the Hudson's Bay Company had inadvertently filed Black's journals under John Finlay's name, fixing his name as the name of the river Black traversed.
  • The fur trader and explorer John McLeod re-located the river that Black discovered (the Kechika) and named it Black's River; however, the Canadian government officially recorded the name as the Kechika.
  • The Samuel Black Range lies between the Toodoggone and Firesteel Rivers.
  • Black Lake is a small lake on the south-western side of the Samuel Black Range.

References

  1. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxvii.
  2. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxvii.
  3. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxvii.
  4. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxvii.
  5. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxviii.
  6. ^ Black, Samuel (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. xxvii-iii.
  7. ^ Black, Samual (1955). E.E. Rich (ed.). Black's Rocky Mountain Journal, 1824. London: Hudson's Bay Record Society. pp. xxix.
  8. ^ McGillvary, Simon. (1988). The North West Company in rebellion: Simon McGillivray's Fort William notebook, 1815. Jean Morrison, ed. Thunder Bay: Thunder Bay Historical Museum Society.
  9. ^ Glyndwr Williams, ed. (1975). Hudson's Bay Miscellany, 1670-1870. Winnipeg: Hudson's Bay Record Society. p. 192n3.
  10. ^ Bancroft, H.H. (1884). History of the Northwest Coast. Vol.II. San Francisco: A.L. Bancroft and Company. p. 511n4-513n4.
  11. ^ Ogden, Peter Skeene (1995). "The Shewappe Murder" in Traits of American Indian Life and Character. Dover Publications, New York. p. 91-95.

External links