<h3> CHAPTER II </h3>
<h4>
SELKIRK, THE COLONIZER
</h4>
<p>From the north and west of Scotland have come two types of men with
whom every schoolboy is now familiar. One of these has been on many a
battlefield. He is the brawny Highland warrior, with buckled tartan
flung across his shoulder, gay in pointed plume and filibeg. The other
is seen in many a famous picture of the hill-country—the Highland
shepherd, wrapped in his plaid, with staff in hand and long-haired dog
by his side, guarding his flock in silent glen, by still-running burn,
or out upon the lonely brae.</p>
<p>But in Thomas Douglas's day such types of Highland life were very
recent factors in Scottish history. They did not appear, indeed, until
after the battle of Culloden and the failure of the Rebellion of 1745.
Loyalty, firm and unbending, has always been a characteristic of the
mountaineer. The
Highlanders held to the ancient house of Stuart
which had been dethroned. George II of England was repudiated by most
of them as a 'wee, wee German Lairdie.' More than thirty thousand
claymores flashed at the beck of Charles Edward, the Stuart prince,
acclaimed as 'King o' the Highland hearts.' When the uprising had been
quelled and Charles Edward had become a fugitive with a price on his
head, little consideration could be expected from the house of Hanover.
The British government decided that, once and for all, the power of the
clans should be broken.</p>
<p>For centuries the chief strength of the Highland race had lain in the
clan. By right of birth every Highlander belonged to a sept or clan.
His overlord was an elected chief, whom he was expected to obey under
all circumstances. This chief led in war and exercised a wide
authority over his people. Just below him were the tacksmen, who were
more nearly related to him than were the ordinary clansmen. Every
member of the clan had some land; indeed, each clansman had the same
rights to the soil as the chief himself enjoyed. The Highlander dwelt
in a humble shealing; but, however poor, he
gloried in his
independence. He grew his own corn and took it to the common mill; he
raised fodder for his black, shaggy cattle which roamed upon the rugged
hillsides or in the misty valleys; his women-folk carded wool sheared
from his own flock, spun it, and wove the cloth for bonnet, kilt, and
plaid. When his chief had need of him, the summons was vivid and
picturesque. The Fiery Cross was carried over the district by swift
messengers who shouted a slogan known to all; and soon from every
quarter the clansmen would gather at the appointed meeting-place.</p>
<p>The clans of the Highlands had led a wild, free life, but their dogged
love for the Stuart cause brought to them desolation and ruin. By one
stroke the British government destroyed the social fabric of centuries.
From the farthest rock of the storm-wasted Orkneys to the narrow home
of Clan Donald in Argyllshire, the ban of the government was laid on
the clan organization. Worst of all, possession of the soil was given,
not to the many clansmen, but to the chiefs alone.</p>
<p>While the old chiefs remained alive, little real hardship was
inflicted. They were
wedded to the old order of things, and left
it unchanged. With their successors, however, began a new era. These
men had come under the influence of the south, whither they had gone
for education, to correct the rudeness of their Highland manners. On
their return to their native country they too often held themselves
aloof from the uncouth dwellers in the hills. The mysterious love of
the Gael for his kith and kin had left them; they were no longer to
their dependants as fathers to children. More especially had these
Saxon-bred lordlings fallen a prey to the commercial ideas of the
south. It was trying for them to possess the nominal dignity of
landlords without the money needed to maintain their rank. They were
bare of retinue, shabby in equipage, and light of purse. They saw but
one solution of their difficulty. Like their English and Lowland
brethren, they must increase the rents upon their Highland estates. So
it came about that the one-time clansmen, reduced to mere tenants,
groaned for the upkeep of their overlords.</p>
<p>Nor did this end the misfortunes of the clansmen. An attractive lure
was held out to the new generation of chieftains, and greed and avarice
were to triumph. Southern
speculators had been rambling over the
Highlands, eager to exploit the country. These men had seen a land of
grass and heather, steep crag, and winter snow. Observing that the
country was specially adapted to the raising of sheep, they sought by
offering high rents to acquire land for sheep-walks. Thus, through the
length and breadth of the Highlands, great enclosures were formed for
the breeding of sheep. Where many crofters had once tilled the soil,
only a lone shepherd was now found, meditating on scenes of desolation.
Ruined dwellings and forsaken hamlets remained to tell the tale. Human
beings had been evicted: sheep had become the 'devourers of men.' In
many parts of the Highlands the inhabitants, driven from mountain
homes, were forced to eke out a meagre existence on narrow strips of
land by the seashore, where they pined and where they half-starved on
the fish caught in the dangerous waters.</p>
<p>From such a dilemma there was but one escape. Behind the evicted
tenantry were the sheep-walks; before them was the open sea. Few
herrings came to the net; the bannock meal was low; the tartan
threadbare. In their utter hopelessness they listened to the good news
which came of a land beyond the
Atlantic where there was plenty
and to spare. It is small wonder that as the ships moved westward they
carried with them the destitute Highlander, bound for the colonies
planted in North America.</p>
<p>This 'expatriation' was spread over many weary years. It was in full
process in 1797, when Thomas Douglas became Lord Daer. His six elder
brothers had been ailing, and one by one they had died, until he, the
youngest, alone survived. Then, when his father also passed away, on
May 24, 1799, he was left in possession of the ancestral estates and
became the fifth Earl of Selkirk.</p>
<p>As a youngest son, who would have to make his own way in the world,
Thomas Douglas had prepared himself, and this was a distinct advantage
to him when his elevation in rank occurred. He entered into his
fortune and place an educated man, with the broad outlook upon life and
the humanitarian sympathy which study and experience bring to a
generous spirit. Now he was in a position to carry out certain
philanthropic schemes which had begun earlier to engage his attention.
His jaunts in the Highlands amid 'the mountain and the flood' were now
to bear fruit. The dolorous plaint of the hapless clansmen had
struck an answering chord in the depths of his nature. As Thomas
Douglas, he had meant to interest himself in the cause of the
Highlanders; now that he was Earl of Selkirk, he decided, as a servant
of the public, to use his wealth and influence for their social and
economic welfare. With this resolve he took up what was to be the main
task of his life—the providing of homes under other skies for the
homeless in the Highlands.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1802 the young earl addressed a letter to Lord Pelham,
a minister in the British government, in which he dwelt with enthusiasm
upon the subject of emigration. His letter took the form of an appeal,
and was prophetic. There had previously come into Selkirk's hands
Alexander Mackenzie's thrilling story of his journeys to the Arctic and
the Pacific. This book had filled Selkirk's mind with a great
conception. Men had settled, he told Lord Pelham, on the sea-coast of
British America, until no tract there was left uninhabited but—frozen
wastes and arid plains. What of the fruitful regions which lay in the
vast interior? It was thither that the government should turn the
thoughts of the homeless and the improvident. Leading to this
temperate and fertile area was
an excellent northern highway—the
waters of Hudson Bay and the Nelson.</p>
<p>Lord Selkirk received a not unfavourable reply to his appeal. The
authorities said that, though for the present they could not undertake
a scheme of emigration such as he had outlined, they would raise no
barrier against any private movement which Lord Selkirk might care to
set on foot. The refusal of the government itself to move the
dispossessed men was dictated by the political exigencies of the
moment. Great Britain had no desire to decrease her male population.
Napoleon had just become first consul in France. His imperial eagles
would soon be carrying their menace across the face of Europe, and
Great Britain saw that, at any moment, she might require all the men
she could bring into the field.</p>
<p>As the government had not discountenanced his plan, the Earl of Selkirk
determined to put his theories at once into practice. He made known in
the Highlands that he proposed to establish a settlement in British
North America. Keen interest was aroused, and soon a large company,
mostly from the isle of Skye, with a scattering from other parts of
Scotland, was prepared to embark.
It was intended that these
settlers should sail for Hudson Bay. This and the lands beyond were,
however, by chartered right the hunting preserve of the Hudson's Bay
Company, of which more will be said. Presumably this company
interfered, for unofficial word came from England to Selkirk that the
scheme of colonizing the prairie region west of Hudson Bay and the
Great Lakes would not be pleasing to the government. Selkirk, however,
quickly turned elsewhere. He secured land for his settlers in Prince
Edward Island, in the Gulf of St Lawrence. The prospective colonists,
numbering eight hundred, sailed from Scotland on board three chartered
vessels, and reached their destination in the midsummer of 1803.</p>
<p>Lord Selkirk had intended to reach Prince Edward Island in advance of
his colonists, in order to make ready for their arrival. But he was
delayed by his private affairs, and when he came upon the scene of the
intended settlement, after sunset on an August day, the ships had
arrived and one of them had landed its passengers. On the site of a
little French village of former days they had propped poles together in
a circle, matted them with foliage from the trees, and were
living, like a band of Indians, in these improvised wigwams.</p>
<p>There was, of course, much to be done. Trees and undergrowth had to be
cleared away, surveys made, and plots of land meted out to the various
families. Lord Selkirk remained for several weeks supervising the
work. Then, leaving the colony in charge of an agent, he set out to
make a tour of Canada and the United States.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Selkirk's agents in Scotland were not idle. During the same
summer (1803) a hundred and eleven emigrants were mustered at
Tobermory, a harbour town on the island of Mull. Most of them were
natives of the island. For some reason, said to be danger of attack by
French privateers, they did not put out into the Atlantic that year;
they sailed round to Kirkcaldy and wintered there. In May 1804 the
party went on board the ship <i>Oughton</i> of Greenock, and after a six
weeks' journey landed at Montreal. Thence they travelled in bateaux to
Kingston.</p>
<p>These settlers were on their way to Baldoon Farm, a tract of about nine
hundred and fifty acres which Lord Selkirk had purchased for them in
Upper Canada, near Lake St Clair. Selkirk himself met the party at
Kingston,
having journeyed from Albany for that purpose. He
brought with him an Englishman named Lionel Johnson and his family.
The new settlement was to be stocked with a thousand merino sheep,
already on the way to Canada, and Johnson was engaged to take care of
these and distribute them properly among the settlers. The journey
from Kingston to the Niagara was made in a good sailing ship and
occupied only four days. The goods of the settlers were carried above
the Falls. Then the party resumed their journey along the north shore
of Lake Erie in bateaux, and arrived at their destination in September.</p>
<p>Baldoon Farm was an ill-chosen site for a colony. The land,
prairie-like in its appearance, lay in what is now known as the St
Clair Flats in Kent county, Ontario. It proved to be too wet for
successful farming. It was with difficulty, too, that the settlers
became inured to the climate. Within a year forty-two are reported to
have died, chiefly of fever and dysentery. The colony, however,
enjoyed a measure of prosperity until the War of 1812 broke out, when
the Americans under General M'Arthur, moving from Detroit, despoiled it
of stores, cattle, and sheep, and almost obliterated it. In 1818 Lord
Selkirk
sold the land to John M'Nab, a trader of the Hudson's Bay
Company. Many descendants of the original settlers are, however, still
living in the neighbourhood.</p>
<SPAN name="img-020"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-020.jpg" ALT="Place D'Armes, Montreal, in 1807. From a water-colour sketch after Dillon in M'Gill University Library." BORDER="2" WIDTH="632" HEIGHT="516">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 632px">
Place D'Armes, Montreal, in 1807. <br/>
From a water-colour sketch after Dillon in M'Gill University Library.
</h4>
</center>
<br/>
<p>Before returning to Great Britain, Lord Selkirk rested from his travels
for a time in the city of Montreal, where he was fêted by many of the
leading merchants. What the plutocrats of the fur trade had to relate
to Selkirk was of more than passing interest. No doubt he talked with
Joseph Frobisher in his quaint home on Beaver Hall Hill. Simon
M'Tavish, too, was living in a new-built mansion under the brow of
Mount Royal. This 'old lion of Montreal,' who was the founder of the
North-West Company, had for the mere asking a sheaf of tales, as
realistic as they were entertaining. Honour was done Lord Selkirk
during his stay in the city by the Beaver Club, which met once a
fortnight. This was an exclusive organization, which limited its
membership to those who dealt in furs. Every meeting meant a banquet,
and at these meetings each club-man wore a gold medal on which was
engraved the motto, 'Fortitude in Distress.' Dishes were served which
smacked of prairie and forest—venison, bear flesh, and
buffalo
tongue. The club's resplendent glass and polished silver were marked
with its crest, a beaver. After the toasts had been drunk, the jovial
party knelt on the floor for a final ceremony. With pokers or tongs or
whatever else was at hand, they imitated paddlers in action, and a
chorus of lusty voices joined in a burst of song. It may be supposed
that Lord Selkirk was impressed by what he saw at this gathering and
that he was a sympathetic guest. He asked many questions, and nothing
escaped his eager observation. Little did he then think that his hosts
would soon be banded together in a struggle to the death against him
and his schemes of western colonization.</p>
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