<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<h2>THE 'ADVENTURERS OF ENGLAND'</h2>
<p>In Boston the commissioners of His Majesty King Charles II were
reviewing the affairs of the American Plantations. One of the
commissioners was Sir George Carteret, and when he sailed for England in
August 1665 he was accompanied by the two French explorers. It gives one
a curiously graphic insight into the conditions of ocean travel in those
days to learn that the royal commissioner's ship was attacked, boarded,
and sunk by a Dutch filibuster. Carteret and his two companions landed
penniless in Spain, but, by pawning clothes and showing letters of
credit, they reached England early in 1666. At this time London was in
the ravages of the Great Plague, and King Charles had sought safety from
infection at Oxford. Thither Radisson and Groseilliers were taken and
presented to the king; and we may imagine how their amazing stories of
adventure beguiled his weary hours.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span> The jaded king listened and
marvelled, and ordered that forty shillings a week should be paid to the
two explorers during that year.</p>
<p>As soon as it was safe to return to London—some time in the winter of
1667-68—a group of courtiers became interested in the two Frenchmen,
and forgathered with them frequently at the Goldsmiths' hall, or at
Whitehall, or over a sumptuous feast at the Tun tavern or the Sun
coffee-house. John Portman, a goldsmith and alderman, is ordered to pay
Radisson and Groseilliers �2 to �4 a month for maintenance from December
1667. When Portman is absent the money is paid by Sir John Robinson,
governor of the Tower, or Sir John Kirke—with whose family young
Radisson seems to have resided and whose daughter Mary he married a few
years later—or Sir Robert Viner, the lord mayor, or Mr Young, a
fashionable man about town. No formal organization or charter yet
exists, but it is evident that the gentlemen are bent on some
enterprise, for Peter Romulus is engaged as surgeon and Thomas Gorst as
secretary. Gillam of Boston is hired as captain, along with a Captain
Stannard. At a merry dinner of the gay gentlemen at the Exchange,
Captain Gillam presents a bill of five shillings for 'a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span> rat-catcher'
for the ships. Wages of seamen are set down at �20 per voyage; and His
Most Gracious Majesty, King Charles, gives a gold chain and medal to the
two Frenchmen and recommends them to 'the Gentlemen Adventurers of
Hudson's Bay.' Moreover, there is a stock-book dated this year showing
amounts paid in by or credited to sundry persons, among whom are: Prince
Rupert, James, Duke of York, the Duke of Albemarle, the Earl of Craven,
the Earl of Arlington, the Earl of Shaftesbury, Sir John Robinson, Sir
Robert Viner, Sir Peter Colleton, Sir James Hayes, Sir John Kirke, and
Lady Margaret Drax. Who was the fair and adventurous Lady Margaret Drax?
Did she sip wines with the gay adventurers over 'the roasted pullets' of
the Tun tavern, or at the banquet table at Whitehall?</p>
<p>Then His Majesty the King writes to his 'trusty and Well Beloved
Brother,' James, Duke of York, recommending the loan of the Admiralty
ship, the <i>Eaglet</i>, to the two Frenchmen to search for a North-West
Passage by way of Hudson Bay, the ship 'to be rigged and victualled' at
the charge of 'Dear Cousin Rupert' and his friends Carteret and
Albemarle and Craven <i>et al</i>. The 'Well Beloved<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span> Brother' passes the
order on to Prince Rupert, 'our Dear Cousin'; and the 'Dear Cousin'
transmits instructions to Sir James Hayes, his secretary. Sir James
badgers the Admiralty Board, and in due time the <i>Eaglet</i> is handed over
to Captain Stannard, acting under Radisson. Gillam takes his own
plantation ship, the <i>Nonsuch</i>, under orders from Groseilliers.</p>
<p>The instructions to the captains are signed by Prince Rupert, Craven,
Hayes, Albemarle, Carteret, Colleton, and Portman. These instructions
bid the captains convey the vessels to the place where 'the rendezvous
was set up as Mr Gooseberry and Mr Radisson direct, there to raise
fortifications,' having 'in thought the discovery of a passage to the
South Sea under direction of Mr Gooseberry and Radisson,' and to
prosecute trade always under directions of Mr Gooseberry and Mr
Radisson, and to have 'a particular [<i>sic</i>] respect unto them with all
manner of civility and courtesy.'</p>
<p>Dear old Company! From its very origin it conformed to the canons of
gentlemanly conduct and laid more emphasis on courtesy than on spelling.
Those curious instructions were indicative of its character in later
times. But we quite understand that there was other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span> object in that
voyage than the North-West Passage.</p>
<p>The two ships sailed for Hudson Bay in the spring of 1668. In mid-ocean
they were driven apart by storms. Gillam's <i>Nonsuch</i> with Groseilliers
went on, but the <i>Eaglet</i> with Radisson was disabled and forced to
return, and the season was now too late to permit Radisson to set sail
again until the following spring.</p>
<p>During the interval of enforced idleness Radisson seems to have
diligently courted Mary Kirke, the daughter of Sir John, and to have
written the account of his journeys through the wilds of America. It is
possible that Radisson was inspired to write these journals by Pepys,
the celebrated diarist, who was at this time chief clerk of the
Admiralty, and who lived next door to the Kirkes on Tower Hill. At any
rate it is clear that the journals fell into Pepys' hands, for they were
found two hundred years later in the Pepys collection at the Bodleian
Library.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1669, on the recommendation of the king, the Admiralty
lent the ship <i>Wavero</i> to the adventurers that Radisson might sail to
Hudson Bay. In his eagerness Radisson set out too early. For a second
time he was driven back by storm, but, on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN></span> coming in to harbour at
Gravesend, what was his delight to find the <i>Nonsuch</i> back from Hudson
Bay with Groseilliers and Gillam and such a cargo of furs from the
Rupert river as English merchants had never before dreamed!</p>
<p>The <i>Nonsuch</i> had reached Hudson Strait in August of the year before,
and the captain, guided by Groseilliers, had steered south for 'the
rendezvous' at the lower end of the Bay, where the two French explorers
had set up their marks six years before. There, at the mouth of the
river named Rupert in honour of their patron prince, the traders cast
anchor on September 25. At high tide they beached the ship and piled
logs round her to protect her timbers from ice jams. Then they built a
fort, consisting of two or three log huts for winter quarters, enclosed
in a log palisade. This they named Fort Charles. The winter that
followed must have been full of hardship for the Englishmen, but a
winter on the Bay had no terrors for Groseilliers. While Gillam and the
Englishmen kept house at the fort, he coursed the woods on snow-shoes,
found the Indian camps, and persuaded the hunters to bring down their
furs to trade with him in the spring. Then, when the wild geese darkened
the sky and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span> ice went out with a rush, preparations were made for
the homeward voyage. In June the ship sailed out of the Bay and, as we
have seen, had docked at Gravesend on the Thames while the <i>Wavero</i> with
Radisson was coming back.</p>
<p>The adventurers lost no time. That winter they applied for a charter,
and in May 1670 the charter was granted by King Charles to '<i>The
Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson's
Bay</i>.' The ostensible object was to find the North-West Passage; and to
defray the cost of that finding a monopoly in trade for all time was
given.</p>
<p>Whereas, declares the old charter, these have at their own great cost
and charge undertaken an expedition to Hudson Bay for the discovery of a
new passage to the South Sea and for trade, and have humbly besought the
king to grant them and their successors the whole trade and commerce of
all those seas, straits, bays, rivers, creeks, and sounds in whatever
latitude that lie within the entrance of the straits, together with all
the lands, countries, and territories upon the coasts and confines of
the seas, straits, bays, lakes, rivers, creeks, and sounds not now
actually possessed by any other Christian state, be it known by these
presents that the king has given, granted,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span> ratified, and confirmed the
said grant. The adventurers are free to build forts, employ a navy, use
firearms, pass and enforce laws, hold power of life and death over their
subjects. They are granted, not only the whole, entire, and only liberty
of trade to and from the territories aforesaid, but also the whole and
entire trade to and from nations adjacent to the said territories, and
entrance by water or land in and out of the said territories.</p>
<p>The monopoly could hardly have been made more sweeping. If the
adventurers found other territory westward, such territory was to be
theirs. Other traders were forbidden to encroach on the region. People
were forbidden to inhabit the countries without the consent of the
Company. The Company was empowered to make war for the benefit of trade.
The charter meant, in a word, the establishment of pure feudalism over a
vast region in America. But in the light of the Company's record it may
be questioned whether feudalism was not, after all, the best system for
dealing with the Indian races. For two centuries under the Company's
rule the Indians were peaceable; while in other parts of America, under
a system the opposite of feudalism—the come-who-may-and-take-who-can
policy of the United States<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span>—every step forward taken by the white race
was marked by 'bloody ground.'</p>
<p>Absolutism, pomp, formality, and, let it be added, a sense of personal
responsibility for retainers—all characteristics of feudalism—marked
the rule of the Hudson's Bay Company from the beginning. The adventurers
were not merely merchants and traders; they were courtiers and princes
as well. Rupert, a prince of royal blood, was the first governor; James,
Duke of York, afterwards king, was the second, and Lord Churchill,
afterwards the Duke of Marlborough, the third. The annual meetings of
shareholders in November and the periodic meetings of the Governing
Committee were held at Whitehall, or at the Tower, or wherever the court
chanced to be residing. All shareholders had to take an oath of fidelity
and secrecy: <i>'I doe sweare to bee True and faithful to ye Comp'y of
Adventurers: ye secrets of ye said Comp'y I will not disclose, nor trade
to ye limitts of ye said Comp'y's charter. So help me God.'</i> Oaths of
fidelity and bonds were required from all captains, traders, and
servants. Presents of 'catt skin counterpanes for his bedd,' 'pairs of
beaver stockings for ye King.' 'gold in a faire embroidered purse,'
'silver tankards,' 'a hogs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span>head of claret,' were presented to
courtiers and friends who did the Company a good turn. Servants were
treated with a paternal care. Did a man lose a toe on some frosty
snow-shoe tramp, the Governing Committee solemnly voted him '�4 smart
money,' or '�1 for a periwig,' or '�10 a year pension for life.' No
matter to what desperate straits the Company was reduced, it never
forgot a captain who had saved a cargo from raid, or the hero of a
fight, or a wood-runner who had carried trade inland. For those who died
in harness, 'funeral by torch-light and linkmen [torchbearers] to St
Paul's, Company and crew marching in procession, cost not to exceed
�20'; and though the cost might run up higher, it was duly paid, as in
one instance on record when the good gentlemen at the funeral had '2
pullets and a dozen bottles of sack' over it at the Three Tuns.<br/><br/><br/></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href="images/042a.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/042a-thumb.png" width-obs="405" height-obs="500" alt="" title="Click for larger image" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">JOHN CHURCHILL, FIRST DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH From the painting in the National Portrait Gallery</span><br/><br/></div>
<p>Perhaps the gay gentlemen of the Governing Committee made merry too long
at times, for it appears to have been necessary to impose a fine on all
committee men who did not attend 'yt one hour after ye deputy-governor
turns up ye hour glass,' the fines to go to the Poor Box as 'token of
gratitude for God's so great a blessing to ye Comp'y.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>In February the Governing Committee was always in a great bustle
chartering or buying frigates for the year's voyages. Then the goods for
trade, to be exchanged with the Indians for furs, were chosen and
stored. In the list for 1672 are found '200 fowling pieces and 400
powder horns and 500 hatchets.' Gewgaws, beads, ribbons, and blankets
innumerable were taken on the voyages, and always more or less liquor;
but the latter, it should be remarked, was not traded to the Indians
except in times of keen competition, when the Company had to fight
rivals who used it in trade. Secret orders were given to the captains
before sailing. These orders contained the harbour signals. Ships not
displaying these signals were to be fired on by the forts of Hudson Bay
or lured to wreck by false lights. The sailing orders were always signed
'a God speede, a good wind, a faire saile, y'r loving friends'; and the
gentlemen of the Committee usually went down to the docks at Gravesend
to search lockers for illicit trade, to shake hands and toss a sovereign
and quaff drinks. From the point where a returning ship was 'bespoken'
the chief trader would take horse and ride post-haste to London with the
bills and journals of the voyage. These would be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span> used to check
unlading. Next, the sorting of the furs, the payment of the seamen's
wages—about �20 per year to each man; then the public auction of the
furs. A pin would be stuck in a lighted candle and bids received till
the light burnt below the pin. Sack and canary and claret were served
freely at the sales. Money accruing from sales was kept in an iron box
at the Goldsmiths' exchange, and later in the warehouse in Fenchurch
Street.</p>
<p>Trading in the early days was conducted with a ceremony such as kings
might have practised in international treaty. Dressed in regimentals,
with coloured velvet capes lined with silk, swords clanking, buglers and
drummers rattling a tattoo, the white trader walked out to meet the
Indian chief. The Indian prostrated himself and presented the kingly
white man with priceless furs. The white man kneeled and whiffed pipes
and thanked the Sun for the privilege of meeting so great warriors, and
through his interpreters begged to present the Great Chief with what
would render him invincible among all foes—firearms. Then with much
parleying the little furs such as rabbit and muskrat were exchanged for
the gewgaws.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Later, the coming of rival traders compelled the Company to change its
methods and to fix a standard of trade. This standard varied with the
supply of furs and the caprice of fashion; but at first in respect to
beaver it stood thus:</p>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="standard of trade listing">
<tr><td align="right">½lb.</td><td align="left"> beads</td><td align="left">1 beaver.</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1</td><td align="left"> kettle</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1lb.</td><td align="left"> shot</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">5lbs.</td><td align="left"> sugar</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1lb.</td><td align="left"> tobacco</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1gal.</td><td align="left"> brandy</td><td align="left"> 4 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">2</td><td align="left"> awls</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">12</td><td align="left"> buttons</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">20</td><td align="left"> fish-hooks</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">20</td><td align="left"> flints</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1</td><td align="left"> gun</td><td align="left">12 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">1</td><td align="left"> pistol</td><td align="left"> 4 "</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">8</td><td align="left"> balls</td><td align="left"> 1 "</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>A wicket would be opened at the side of the main gate of the fort. Up to
this wicket the Indians would file with their furs and exchange them
according to the standard. Tally was kept at first with wampum shells or
little sticks; then with bits of lead melted from teachests and stamped
with the initials of the fort. Finally these devices were supplanted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span> by
modern money. We may suppose that the red man was amply able to take
care of himself in the trade, especially when rivals at other points
were bidding for the furs. If the white man's terms were exorbitant and
no rival trader was within reach, the Indian's remedy was a scalping
foray. Oftener than not the Indian was in debt for provisions advanced
before the hunt. If the Indian forgot his debt or carried his fur to a
competitor, as he often did in whole flotillas, the white man would have
his revenge some season when food was scarce; or, if his physical
prowess permitted, he would take his revenge on the spot by
administering a sound thrashing to the transgressor. It is on record
that one trader, in the early days of Moose Factory, broke an oar while
chastising an Indian who had failed in his duty.</p>
<p>Many of the lonely bachelors at the forts contracted marriage with
native women. These marriages were entered on the books of the Company,
and were considered as valid as if bound by clergy. Sometimes they led
to unhappy results. When men returned from the service, the Indian wife,
transplanted to England, lived in wretched loneliness; and the
children—'les petits,' as they are entered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span> in the books—were still
less at home amid English civilization. Gradually it became customary to
leave the Indian women in their native land and to support them with a
pension deducted from the wages of the retired husband and father. This
pension was assured by the Company's system of holding back one-third of
its servants' wages for a retiring fund. If a servant had left any
'petits' behind him, a sum of money was withheld from his wages to
provide a pension for them, and a record of it was kept on the books.
This rule applied even to men who were distinguished in the service.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>In June 1670, one month after the charter was granted, three ships—the
<i>Wavero</i>, the <i>Shaftesbury Pink</i>, and the <i>Prince Rupert</i>—conveying
forty men and a cargo of supplies, sailed for Hudson Bay. Gillam
commanded the <i>Prince Rupert</i>, Radisson went as general superintendent
of trade, and Charles Bayly as governor of the fort at the Rupert river.
Gorst the secretary, Romulus the surgeon, and Groseilliers accompanied
the expedition. The ships duly arrived at Fort Charles, and, while Bayly
and his men prepared the fort for residence and Groseilliers plied trade
with the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span> Indians, Radisson cruised the west coast of the Bay on the
<i>Wavero</i>. He made observations at Moose and Albany rivers, and passed
north to Nelson harbour, where Button had wintered half a century
before. Here, on the projection of land between two great rivers—the
future site of York Factory—Radisson erected the arms of the English
king. The southern river he named Hayes, after Sir James Hayes, Prince
Rupert's secretary. The mouth of this river was a good place to get
furs, for down its broad tide came the canoes of the Assiniboines, the
'Stone Boilers' whom Radisson had met near Lake Superior long ago, and
of the Crees, who had first told him of the Sea of the North.</p>
<p>Radisson returned to England with Gillam on the <i>Prince Rupert</i>, while
Groseilliers wintered on the Bay; and it appears that, during the next
three years, Radisson spent the winters in London advising the Company,
and the summers on the Bay, cruising and trading on the west coast. In
1672 he married Mary Kirke. Sir James Hayes said afterwards that he
'misled her into marrying him,' but there is nothing to show that the
wife herself ever thought so. Perhaps Radisson hoped that his marriage
to the daughter of one of the leading directors of the Company would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span>
strengthen his position. He received �100 a year for his services, but,
although his efforts had turned a visionary search for the North-West
Passage into a prosperous trading enterprise, he was not a shareholder
in the Company.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />