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         Hudsons Bay Company Fur Trade Canada:     more books (37)
  1. The Beaver : Exploring Canada's History Autumn 1983 Special Issue : The Hudson's Bay Company and the Fur Trade : 1670-1870 by Glyndwr Williams, 1991
  2. The Hudson's Bay Company and the fur trade: 1670-1870 by Glyndwr Williams, 1983
  3. The Canadian North West. A Bibliography of the Sources of Information in the Public Reference Library of the City of Toronto, Canada in Regard to the Hudson's Bay Company, the Fur Trade and the Early History of the Canadian North West. by George H (preface) Locke, 1931
  4. [The fur-trade and the Hudson's Bay Company] (Chambers's repository of instructive and amusing tracts) by William Chambers, 1856
  5. Hudson's Bay Company Adventures: The Rollicking Saga of Canada's Fur Traders (Amazing Stories) by Elle Andra-Warner, 2003-10-20
  6. Empire of the Bay: An Illustrated History of the Hudson's Bay Company by Peter C. Newman, 1989-11-07
  7. The remarkable history of the Hudson's bay company,: Including that of the French traders of north-western Canada and of the North-west, XY, and Astor fur companies, by George Bryce, 1910
  8. Hudson's Bay company (Keystone library) by Robert E Pinkerton, 1936
  9. The honourable company;: A history of the Hudson's Bay Company, by Douglas MacKay, 1936
  10. The great company;: Being a history of the honourable company of merchants-adventurers, trading into Hudson's Bay, by Beckles Willson, 1899
  11. The North West company, (University of California publications in history, vol. VII) by Gordon Charles Davidson, 1918
  12. Fort Assiniboine 1823-1860: Hudson's Bay Company way station and fur trade post by Richard F McCarty, 1975
  13. Beaver, kings and cabins by Constance Lindsay Skinner, 1933
  14. The 'Adventurers of England' on Hudson Bay: A chronicle of the fur trade in the North (Chronicles of Canada) by Agnes C Laut, 1922

101. The GRASS RIVER "Great Canadian Rivers"
the site of the Hudson bay company s official competition to the French furtrade. In 1796, on behalf of the Hudson s bay company, he discovered an
http://www.greatcanadianrivers.com/rivers/grass/history-home.html
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GrassRiver History
Aerial view of York Factory
ca. 1925 / York Factory
National Archives of Canada/PA-041571 Samuel Hearne and the Upper Track Fur Trade Route
Archives, artifacts and anecdotes provide a composite sketch of the history of the Grass River as an established 18th and 19th century fur trade route. Known as the "Upper Track," the route extended southwest from the Hudson's Bay Company post of York Factory, on the shore of Hudson Bay, along the Nelson River, through the Grass River system, across Cranberry Portage at the river's southwest end, and down a tributary of the Sturgeon-Weir River to the Hudson's Bay inland trading headquarters at Cumberland Lake.

102. The Canadian Embassy In Haïti
Canadian Tourism Related Images In 1670, the Hudson s bay company was created,and King Charles II of England granted it a large tract of land named
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/haiti/manitoba_apr2003-en.asp

Français
Contact Us Help Search ... CanadaInternational
Manitoba
The Land
Bordered by Ontario, Saskatchewan, Nunavut, Hudson Bay and the United States, Manitoba is one of the three Prairie provinces and is located in the centre of Canada. Its 650 000 km2 of landscape offer few extremes. Elevations rise slowly to the south and west from sea level at Hudson Bay. Most of Manitoba lies between 150 and 300 metres above sea level, but in the Turtle, Riding, Duck and Baldy mountains, heights rise to 700 metres or higher. The highest point in Manitoba is Baldy Mountain, in Duck Mountain Provincial Park, at 831 metres. Manitoba is known as the land of 100 000 lakes, a legacy of enormous Lake Agassiz, which covered much of the province after the glaciers retreated. The major rivers of western Canada flow into the lowland region of Manitoba, giving Manitoba 90 percent of the hydro-electric potential of the Prairie region. The northern topography is heavily glaciated and covered in forest, dominated by pine, hemlock and birch. Manitoba is one of the sunniest provinces in Canada. It has a continental climate, with great temperature extremes. Typical of southern Manitoba, the average January temperature in Winnipeg is about minus 20°C; the July average is about 19°C. In Thompson, in the centre of northern Manitoba, the averages for the same months are about minus 27°C and plus 15°C.

103. The Canadian Embassy In Chile
This top banner consists of multiple and varied pictures of Canadian landscapes In 1670, the Hudson s bay company was created, and King Charles II of
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/chile/manitoba_apr2003-en.asp

Français
Contact Us Help Search ... CanadaInternational
Manitoba
The Land
Bordered by Ontario, Saskatchewan, Nunavut, Hudson Bay and the United States, Manitoba is one of the three Prairie provinces and is located in the centre of Canada. Its 650 000 km of landscape offer few extremes. Elevations rise slowly to the south and west from sea level at Hudson Bay. Most of Manitoba lies between 150 and 300 metres above sea level, but in the Turtle, Riding, Duck and Baldy mountains, heights rise to 700 metres or higher. The highest point in Manitoba is Baldy Mountain, in Duck Mountain Provincial Park, at 831 metres. Manitoba is known as the land of 100 000 lakes, a legacy of enormous Lake Agassiz, which covered much of the province after the glaciers retreated. The major rivers of western Canada flow into the lowland region of Manitoba, giving Manitoba 90 percent of the hydro-electric potential of the Prairie region. The northern topography is heavily glaciated and covered in forest, dominated by pine, hemlock and birch. Manitoba is one of the sunniest provinces in Canada. It has a continental climate, with great temperature extremes. Typical of southern Manitoba, the average January temperature in Winnipeg is about minus 20°C; the July average is about 19°C. In Thompson, in the centre of northern Manitoba, the averages for the same months are about minus 27°C and plus 15°C.

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