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(Maniwaki in the Outaouais region of Quebec, Canada. HBC established fur trading post) (17th century fur trade building located in Lachine, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.) (Nipising 1874 Hudson's Bay Company trading post) Fort George
Fort Saskatchewan is a city along the North Saskatchewan River in Alberta, Canada.It is 25 kilometres (16 mi) northeast of Edmonton, the provincial capital.It is part of the Edmonton census metropolitan area and one of 24 municipalities that constitute the Edmonton Metropolitan Region Board.
This is a list of Hudson's Bay Company trading posts. [1]For the fur trade in general see North American fur trade and Canadian canoe routes (early).For some groups of related posts see Fort-Rupert for James Bay.
Fort Pelly was a Hudson's Bay Company fur trading post located in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The fort was named after Sir John Pelly , governor of the Hudson's Bay Company. The current village of Pelly, Saskatchewan , takes its name from the fort, [ 1 ] and is located approximately 8 miles north of the site of the fort.
Fort San, 1920s with view of the Fort Former Indian Hospital, Fort Qu'Appelle. Maurice Macdonald Seymour, Commissioner of Public Health, was a physician and surgeon of the early North-West Territories in Canada. He founded the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League which incorporated and constructed the Fort Qu'Appelle sanitarium.
The Fort Saskatchewan Record is a once-weekly (Thursdays) free newspaper in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, Canada, a city on the northeast side of the Edmonton metropolitan area. It is the oldest paper in the city. [2]
The North West Company (NWC) had a nearby post called Fort St. Louis. It produced few furs and was closed in 1801. The second Fort Carlton (1805–1810) was built on the South Saskatchewan River six miles upstream from the former South Branch House. Joseph Howse (Howes) [6] was a trader. There was a nearby NWC post.
1774: HBC builds Cumberland House, Saskatchewan downstream from Fort de la Corne. (this is the "first" HBC inland post and is at the join of the Sturgeon-Weir River and the Saskatchewan River so is the gateway to Lake Athabasca, in the Mackenzie River system) 1774: English "Pedlars" from Montreal have trading post below the Forks of the ...