We're going to finish our visit to B.C. with a history lesson; it's one I found fascinating. One day Mrs. F.G. and I drove down the highway to Fort Langley, a historic site with ongoing re-enactment illustrating life in a fur trading post of 200 years ago. And it ties us to the earliest exploration of the west coast of North America.
There was an interesting display of the barrels they used for shipping food, and of barrel making. Encouraged by the local Kwantlen people the fort took salmon and cranberries in trade as well as furs, hence the need for the barrels..
Here a visiting student is using a draw knife to try making a barrel stave. She was with one of several visiting groups of students that day.
Of course they had a blacksmith's forge.
I had an interesting chat with this fur trader, ending up learning about his real life back home in Ontario.
Hudson's Bay blankets were a popular trading good.
I found it quite an interesting history lesson getting the boundaries between the U.S. and Canada straight in my mind. I know where they are of course, but I hadn't linked them to the fur traders and explorers of over 200 years ago.
The Louisiana Purchase of 1803 on the American side (the dark green), involved an enormous area of land from Louisiana to Montana purchased from France (basically the Mississippi River drainage basin on the west side of the river). The Lewis and Clark Expedition was sent out in 1804 to explore this area. They reached the Pacific at the mouth of the Columbia River in 1805. At this point a huge tract of land from present-day Texas to northern California was still part of Mexico. The Oregon Country was an American label; not a British one.
On the Canadian side. although it's not shown on this map, Simon Fraser, a fur trader from the North-west Company, reached the mouth of the Fraser River in 1808. The Fraser River reaches the Strait of Georgia just north of the 49th parallel and Fort Langley sat just a few miles up the river. The mouth of the Fraser River is just a few blocks north of Boundary Bay, so-named because the 49th parellel runs right through the middle of the bay.
So in 1846 when politicians in Washington were negotiating a boundary from the Rockies west, they looked at these explorers from nearly 50 years before, and decided the boundary had to be at the 49th parallel. It already existed at this parallel from Minnesota to the Rocky Mountains. Those who argued for '54.40 or bust' lost their case, but there were plenty of later disputes over the San Juan Islands, settled in the aftermath of the Pig War.
And thus I learned the link between Fort Langley, the fur trade and the Canadian/U.S. border.

So interesting, I remember as a child going to the Pukekohe shops, there was a Blacksmith on the main street and he had a huge anvil, guess even then in the 1940's some still brought their horses in to be shod. That beaver hat is a beauty. I can see you wearing one in winter to ward off the snow and then the summer sun.
ReplyDeleteI never thought of me wearing a beaver hat!
DeleteA bit of history I did now know.
ReplyDeleteBTW that fur trader guy is perfect with that thick, dark beard.
A very interesting read and I enjoyed seeing your photographs.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Interesting bit of history.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fascinating and educational trip that was!
ReplyDeleteIt's fun to learn about new things. Great pictures of it all.
ReplyDeleteI use one of those Hudson Bay blankets on the bed this time of year. Sooo warm! Love this history!
ReplyDeleteAh, yes, the history of the western border between Canada and the USA is fascinating. Sometimes, more recently shall we say, those of us who live in Washington State down here might have wished for the Canadian border to be further south. But it is what it is. Ok, FG, I have "Fort Langley" on my list for visiting during a future camping trip. Gosh, thank you for the info and photos.
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ReplyDeleteVery interesting! I don't recall learning about the negotiations in my high school Canadian history. Though I may not have been paying attention.
ReplyDeleteFort Langley is almost always a field trip for school kids. It's an interesting place.
ReplyDeleteQuite an array of barrels. I had no idea they took salmon and cranberries in trade, but it makes perfect sense.
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