THE JOURNAL OF JOHN WORK. January to October, 1835.Archives of British Columbia, Memoir No. X, with an Introduction and Notes by H.D. Dee. - Rare Book Insider
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Dee, Henry Drummond, editor.

THE JOURNAL OF JOHN WORK. January to October, 1835.Archives of British Columbia, Memoir No. X, with an Introduction and Notes by H.D. Dee.

Banfield, Victoria: 1945
  • $100
Victoria: Banfield, 1945. 98pp. 4 b/w plates. Beige cloth. Except for a small section clipped from the front free endpaper to remove a name, this is a fine copy. John Work was Chief Trader of the Columbia District for the Hudson's Bay Company. This is his journal of an expedition northward from the Columbia River to Fort Simpson on the British Columbia coast, and his return voyage aboard the brigantine vessel Lama. The scholarly footnotes by Dee shed light on the personalities mentioned and places noted by Work in his detailed log of daily events. [Strathern 621].
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STATEMENT RESPECTING THE EARL OF SELKIRK’S SETTLEMENT UPON THE RED RIVER, IN NORTH AMERICA; Its Destruction in 1815 and 1816; The Massacre of Governor Semple and His Party. With Observations Upon a Recent Publication, Entitled “A Narrative of Occurrences in the Indian Countries,” &c.

London: John Murray, 1817. [Revised and enlarged edition of the privately printed 1st edition of 1816]. 8v0. Half title. viii + 194pp + c. Folding copper-plate engraved map by Arrowsmith as frontispiece. Original paper covered boards, cloth spine, and paper label, slightly chipped and faded. Pages uncut. Armorial bookplate of Richard Holmden. Very good. A review of the accusations that the partners of the NWC conspired to disrupt and destroy the Selkirk colony, which allegedly led to the "Seven Oaks Massacre" by Cuthbert Grant and several Metis counterparts. This infamous act (which resulted in the deaths of Gov. Semple and 20 other men) was a result of the NWC's efforts to protect and retain their right-of-way through territory claimed by the Red River Settlement under the protection of the HBC The text includes examinations in detail of the verbal and written confrontations between Selkirk and the NWC, as well as a point-by-point response to the NWC's "A Narrative of Occurrences in the Indian Countries." (authored anonymously but probably by either Simon McGillivray or S.H. Wilcocke). The appendix includes affidavits concerning the Seven Oaks Massacre, and related correspondence. This second edition exceeds the first edition by 69 pages and includes an enlarged appendix. The map "Sketch of Part of the Hudson Bay Company's Territory" depicts the territory between Port Nelson to Lake Superior, from Cumberland House to Fort Albany.
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A NARRATIVE OF TRANSACTIONS IN THE RED RIVER COUNTRY; From the Commencement of the Operations Of The Earl Of Selkirk, Till The Summer Of The Year 1816 . With Map, Exhibiting Part Of The Route of the Canadian Fur Traders in the Interior of North America, And Comprising The Scene of Contest Between Lord Selkirk and The North-West Company.

MacDonnell, Alexander [Greenfield]. London: B. M'Millan, Bow Street, Covent-Garden, 1819. 8vo. xix + 85pp. Large folding hand-coloured map. Fine, crisp, untrimmed copy in original printed grey wrappers. Preserved in quarter scarlet morocco clamshell box. An important and rare work. Inscribed on the front wrapper: "Right Honble Earl of Rocksavage & & & Piccadilly, with Mr. Simon McGillivray Compliments" An unusual presentation inscription with McGillivray's full name when, for this historical period, it was more often customary to inscribe, "With the author's compliments" suggesting thereby the possibility of a special relationship or friendship. Macdonell, a partner in the NW Company, was in charge of the Red River Department and stationed at Pembina during the conflict with Selkirk and the HBC. M'Donell here outlines the establishment and growth of the Selkirk colony from 1812, and attempts to justify his and his company's actions as a legitimate response to the provocations by Selkirk's colonists,From Wikipedia: George Horatio Cholmondeley, 2nd Marquess of Cholmondeley (16 January 1792 - 8 May 1870), styled Viscount Malpas from 1792 to 1815 and subsequently Earl of Rocksavage until 1827, was a British peer and Lord Great Chamberlain of England between 1830 and 1838. In the United Kingdom, the Lord Great Chamberlain is the sixth of the Great Officers of State (not to be confused with the Great Offices of State), ranking beneath the Lord Privy Seal and above the Lord High Constable. The Lord Great Chamberlain has charge over the Palace of Westminster. We cannot trace any relationship between the Earl of Rocksavage and Simon McGillvray, except to say that they were contemporaries, possibly linked through the War of 1812, or through the Canada Club at London. [TPL 1100].
  • $5,500
  • $5,500