Title: The Hudson
1The Hudsons Bay Company
2What is the Hudsons Bay Company?
- The Hudsons Bay Company is the oldest commercial
company in North America and one of the oldest in
the world - The Hudsons Bay Company started off during the
fur trade in 1670 and is still a successful
company today around the world
3The fur trade
- Since the beginning of time people have been
trading animal furs to create pelts for
protection - Around the 1600s, there was an increasing demand
for beaver fur to create hats in Europe - Beaver pelts created high quality felt which was
resistant to water and very warm - At one point, the beaver became virtually extinct
in Europe because of the high demand for their
fur which led European explorers to travel to
North America in search of beavers - The Europeans came in contact with the aboriginal
peoples who traded their pelts. This fuelled the
fur trade
4The beginning of the fur trade in Canada
- Contact between the Aboriginals in Canada and
Europeans grew when Jacques Cartier sailed from
France to North America in 1534 - Cartier sailed on behalf of the king of France in
search of gold and first reached the Atlantic
Coast of Canada where he met the Mikmaq peoples
5The beginning of the fur trade in Canada
- The Mikmaq were eager to trade their furs with
Cartier in exchange for European tools and
inventions such as knives - When Cartier travelled further inland, he
discovered the Iroquois who also traded their
furs - Cartier claimed the land for France and the
Tadoussac (St. Lawrence River) became the centre
of trade for the French and aboriginal people - The aboriginal peoples were vital to the fur
trade because of their knowledge of fur-trapping
and navigation of Canadian landscape which they
passed on to the Europeans
6Samuel de Champlain
- In 1608, Samuel de Champlain realized potential
trade opportunities and travelled to modern day
Québec City in order to establish a perminant
settlement - Champlain wanted to bring the French over to
Canada, and the King gave him permission provided
that Champlain established the fur trade - Samuel de Champlain sent his men to live among
the Algonquin and Huron people in order to learn
their culture and language - It was part of his plan to strenghthen the bond
between the French and aboriginal in order to
keep the fur trade thriving because they depended
on the aboriginal peoples resourses
7English vs French
- Shortly after Samuel de Champlain established a
perminent French settlement in modern day Québec
and started developping the fur trade, the
English became interested in the potential for
money from the fur trade - Competition between the French and English was
fierce - England and France competed for control over the
land and resources and shipped their beaver pelts
back to Europe - The competition between England and France also
caused disputes among First Nations who took
sides among England and France. - Many wars between the French and Wendat against
th English and Iroquois took place and the
disputes lasted over 90 years, almost putting an
end to the fur trade
8The Hudson Bay
- Meanwhile, over serveral years, explorers Martin
Frobisher, John Davis, and Henry Hudson explored
the Atlantic searching for a Northwest Passage - In 1610, Explorer Henry Hudson came across a bay
which was named after himself Hudson Bay - This marked an important day in Canadian History
and the fur trade
9Médard Chouart des Groseilliers and Pierre
Radisson
- Médard Chouart des Groseilliers and Pierre
Radisson were two french courieurs de bois (fur
traders who gathered fur from the woods and
traded with the First Nations) who brought the
fur trade back to life - During their travels, the two men met the Sioux
who told them about the abundant amount of
beavers up north near the Hudson Bay - Coming back from the Hudson Bay, they had
thousands of beavers which were taken away
because the two men didnt have rights to the
lands - The two men could not get financial support for
their expeditions from the American or French so
they started working for the English - In 1665, they met with the king of England, King
Charles II who supported their expeditions to
collect furs
10The Hudson's Bay Company is formed
- Prince Rupert, the cousin of King Charles II,
aquired the Royal Charter giving permission to
the land around the Hudson Bay to the Governor
and Company of Adventurers of England trading
into Hudson Bay - This gave Médard Chouart des Groseilliers and
Pierre Radisson the permission to hunt beavers in
the lands of the Hudson Bay for King Henry II - This was the foundation of the Hudsons Bay
Company
11The Governor and Company of Adventurers of
England Trading into Hudson's Bay
- The charter giving King Charles II the rights to
the land around the Hudson Bay were incorporated
on May 2nd 1670 - The royal charter given to the Governor and
Company of Adventurers of England Trading into
the Hudson Bay gave the company a monopoly over
the fur trade - The area was named Ruperts Land after Prince
Rupert - This region that King Charles II owned rights to
consisted of (3.9 million km²) and was 1/3 of the
size of Canada today and also included parts of
the United States - Rupert's Land was the largest purchase of land in
the 1800s
12The beginning of The Hudson Bay Company
- The headquarters of the Hudsons Bay Company was
established in Fort Nelson which is in present
day northeastern Manitoba - The Business was booming from 1714 until the late
1740s bringing back profits to England - The Hudson's Bay Company had no competition since
they were the only company aloud to trade fur - The company built posts all along the Hudson Bay
in present day Manitoba, Ontario, and Québec and
eventually began creating factories inland - The First Nations and Métis peoples did most of
the animal trapping and pelt preparation for the
Hudsons Bay Company
13Conflict for the Hudsons Bay Company
- The success of the Hudsons Bay Company began to
slow down around the 1750s due to the Seven
Years War, a war between England and France
battling over land in Canada - Eventually Britain won back most of the land that
France had taken over also taking over New France - After the war had ended, The Hudsons Bay Company
had new competition from North West Company in
Montréal - The North West Company was formed by former
French coureurs de bois in 1783 who had no one to
work for after Britain won New France
14Hudsons Bay Company vs. North West Company
- After the Hudsons Bay company had a monopoly
over the fur trade for so long, eventually the
North West Company became a strong competition - A rivalry formed between the two companies trying
to have control over the fur trade - Around the 1800s, a war began between the two
companies - They began to explore farther west in order to
find new trading partners, traveling to Edmonton
and Calgary and establishing trading posts - After years of war, the North West Company was
defeated and in 1821, it merged into the Hudsons
Bay Company - There was now no competition and the company
experienced success once again
15Years of power and change
- After merging with The North West Company, HBC
owned most of the land in Canada and was the most
powerful company in North America - In 1821, HBC started trading their furs from
other countries - New technologies in treating fur made the need
for beaver less necessary - Different types of animals were now being used
for cheaper and silk hats were becoming
fashionable - By 1840, the fur trade was shrinking and by 1870,
it was no longer a major industry
16The beginning of the retail era
- In 1867, the Dominion of Canada was formed
- The government of Canada asked Britain for the
rights over Ruperts land in fear that the
Americans would take over the land in the west - The HBC signed the Deed of Surrender in 1869,
signing most of their land over to the British
Crown which granted the land to Canada in
exchange for money and some of the land - This started the retail era for the HBC, since
the fur trade had collapsed - The company started a new business selling land
to the farmers, settlers and developers - They also provided supplies for the settlers in
the West and opened its first retail store in
Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1881
17Hudsons Bay Company Today
- Most of the Hudsons Bay Company stores were in
Western Canada until the 1960s when the company
bought several chains in Montreal and shortened
their name to the Bay - This led to the expansion to Eastern Canada
- By 1978, it was the largest chain store in Canada
- Around the 1980s, the Bay bought several retail
stores including Zellers, Simpsons, Fields,
Robinsons, Home Outfitters and many more - The Bay was still involved in the fur trade up
until 1991, when it sold the last of its trading
posts - It is now a chain of over 90 department stores
across Canada and is North Americas oldest
company
18Bibliography
- http//firstpeoplesofcanada.com/fp_furtrade/fp_fur
trade3.html - http//www.canadiana.ca/hbc/hist/hist6_e.html
- http//www2.hbc.com/hbc/history/