This map shows the huge range of Hudson Bay Company operations and influence including its Factories and trading posts.
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On May 2, 1670 King Charles II of England granted
a Royal Charter to The Governor
and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson’s Bay. Not
only was it one of the first corporations, it was soon one of the
richest and most powerful in the world.
Within decades it would control a fur trading empire including
the vast Hudson’s Bay drainage, far flung outpost as far away as the Pacific,
and extending deep into what would become U.S territory trading
exclusively with hundreds of indigenous tribes. It owned outright fully 15% of all North
American land excluding Spanish possessions and virtually controlled
almost all of what is modern Canada excluding the Maritimes, Quebec, the
southern portions of Ontario. And
this dominance extended well into the 19th Century.
All of
that wealth and power would likely have remained in French hands had it
not been for the extremely bad judgment of a colonial official.
Pierre-Esprit Radisson and Médard des Groseilliers
a/k/a Médard de Chouart, Sieur des Groseilliers, two traders working
from established French fur trading posts near the Great Lakes, got wind
of Cree stories of fabulous new fur county north of and beyond Lake
Superior including rumors of a frozen sea to the north. Believing that access to the sea from the
north via a new trading post on Hudson Bay would save the cost of
overland transportation to the St. Lawrence route to the Atlantic, they
asked for permission to establish one.
Not only were they turned down, they were absolutely forbidden from
trading north for fear that lucrative monopolies on the St. Lawrence
would be disrupted. The two pressed
ahead anyway believing that arriving in Montreal laden with valuable
furs would open eyes. And indeed they
returned from a1659-60 expedition to the upper regions with just such a
fabulous hall.
Radisson
& Groseillers Establish the Fur Trade in the Great North West, 1662, by
Archibald Bruce Stapleton.
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Instead of
being hailed as heroes, however, the pair was arrested for trading
without a license and their furs confiscated—to be sold a tidy profit on no
investment by the very official who commandeered them. Infuriated, upon release the pair made it to
the main port of French rivals in North America—Boston. The flinty-eyed merchants of Boston may
have detested the Papist swine and feared French power, but they knew an
opportunity when they saw one. Boston
investors helped the Frenchmen outfit a ship to sail into Hudson’s Bay, which
the English had shaky claims upon based on the final voyage of Henry
Hudson back in 1610-11. The 1663
voyage, however, failed when the Frenchmen’s ship became locked in sea-ice in
the bay.
Still, the
long-term prospects for the venture looked encouraging enough that one Boston
backer sent the two to London to seek new financing. The hapless pair arrived in England in 1665,
at the height of the Great Plague when business of all sorts was at a
virtual standstill. They languished for
years in fruitless search of a benefactor.
Finally they encountered Prince Rupert of The Rhine, a
cousin and favorite of Charles II.
He agreed to be a sponsor and investor and introduced the pair to the
King, who likewise was intrigued and invested for his private purse. That attracted still more capital, secured by
the valuable Royal Charter.
That
outfitted two ships, The Nonsuch
was commanded by Captain Zachariah Gillam, who was accompanied by
Groseilliers, and The Eaglet
was commanded by Captain William Stannard and accompanied by Radisson
which sailed in June 1668. While The Eaglet was forced to turn back after
running into heavy seas off Ireland and sustaining heavy damage, The Nonsuch completed the dangerous sail
to the southern rim of Hudson’s Bay. A
trading post, Charles Fort (later Rupert House), was established
at the mouth of the river named for the expedition patron, Prince Rupert, on James
Bay. By next summer the ship set
sail with a full load of furs traded from the natives. In London the cargo was sold for £1,233, an
enormous sum and more than enough to pay for the expedition and turn a tidy
profit.
King Charles II presents the Hudson Bay Company Royal Charter in 1670.
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On the
basis of those kinds of results, Charles II issued his Royal Charter which
granted the company a monopoly on all trade from Rupert’s Land--the
region drained by all rivers and streams flowing into Hudson Bay. A Royal Governor was appointed and
English merchant adventurers became factors and agent’s overseeing a
growing number of fort/trading posts--
Rupert House, Moose Factory
(1673, south) and Fort Albany, Ontario (1679, west) on James Bay and
three posts were established on the
western shore of Hudson Bay proper, Fort Severn (1689), York Factory
(1684) and Fort Churchill (1717).
York Factory became the most important and eventually headquarters for
the Company.
The Factor employed mainly French
and Métis—French/native “half breeds”—to go into the wilderness to trade
with remote tribes, do some trapping on their own, and to encourage the tribes
to visit the Factories to trade and barter.
This
system quickly cut into profits by the French, who organized raids on
Hudson Bay posts. During King
William’s War 1688-97 several posts changed hand multiple times. And during Queen Anne’s War 1702-17
the company lost all of its outposts except Fort Albany but all were
returned to the Company under the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht. The wars disrupted Company operations and no dividends
were paid to stock holders for twenty years.
With
relative peace restored—further Anglo-French conflicts would be less disruptive
to the fur trade—the Company was finally able to become the economic engine of
the dawning Empire rivaling even the East India Company, in which
the Hudson Bay Company became heavily invested.
By the
early 18th Century trade values were regularized around a standard
trading unit known as the Made Beaver (MB)—a prime pelt
ready for processing. The value of other
furs and hides were calculated in relation to the MB. Trade goods such as knives, kettles,
beads, needles, and the Hudson’s Bay point blankets were
fixed to the MB, eliminating much of the haggling of the French trading
system. By the mid-1700’s point blankets
made up 80% of the value of trading goods.
These heavy woven wool blankets had thick stripes. In 1774, as tensions rose with the English
Colonies on the Atlantic seaboard, the Company began establishing inland
trading posts, the first being Cumberland House in what is now Saskatchewan.
Trapper/traders in coats made from Hudson Bay Company Point Blankets.
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The American
Revolution quickly became part of another Anglo/French world
war. French squadron under Jean-François
de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse captured and demolished York Factory
and Prince of Wales Fort, a strong, modern stone and masonry star
fort at the mouth of the Churchill River.
That
disruption, however cost the Company fewer headaches than the creation of a new
rival, North West Company (NWC) was founded in Montreal in 1779
and the first domestic joint stock corporation in North America. Soon the NWC was operating its own string of
trading posts and once again diverting trade from the Northerly route through
the Bay to access to world markets through the St. Lawrence. Fierce competition between the companies
forced up prices for furs and cut deeply into profits. In the field, competition was often violent
with traders and native allies raiding each other’s camps and sometimes
fighting pitched battles.
The
British Government stepped in in 1824 and forcibly folded the NWC into the
Hudson Bay Company. Redundant and
competitive posts were closed or consolidated.
The company was also extended trading rights to the vast new Northwest
Territories and with the creation of the Columbia Department to the Pacific
Ocean in the west.
Hudson Bay traders pushed deep into the untamed wilderness in search of beaver pelts and furs.
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Through
the 1830’s John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company based in Astoria dominated
the rich Pacific coast fur trade.
But with the establishment of Fort Vancouver on the Columbia
River the company gained the upper hand.
While it sent expeditions deep into Northern California—dangerously
claimed by both the Spanish and Russians, the Company did
everything in its power to discourage American encroachment by both overland
fur traders and land hungry immigrants.
Under terms of an 1818 agreement, no formal
boundary had yet been established between US and British territory but Oregon
was supposed to be jointly administered by the two nations with trading
rights to both. At best it was a tense
relationship. As immigrants began
pushing west, the Company established Ft. Boise astride one likely route
and bought the American trading post at Fort Hall. Traders at both posts did everything they
could to keep immigrants from coming.
But in 1843 Marcus Whitman led the first successful immigrant
train along the Oregon Trail to the Willamette Valley which
was followed by a flood of immigrants and foretold the doom of the Oregon fur
trade. When the boundary was established
at the 49th Parallel after much bluster and sabre rattling by the
Americans, the company abandoned Oregon.
Through these years the Company was getting richer,
and also more complex. MBs might due as
a trading standard in the wilderness, but for increasing operations in
civilization, cash was required.
For more than thirty years the Company issued its own bank notes, denominated
in Pound Sterling and printed in London.
The company’s insistence on enforcing its trading
monopolies set the stage for one of the great crisis of Canadian
history—the rebellion of the mixed race Métis
that had its roots in the trial of Guillaume
Sayer for illegal trading. A large
group of Métis led by Louis Riel, Sr. staged a noisy, armed
demonstration outside the Company court house. Sayer was convicted, but not fined de facto ending the monopoly. The Red River Métis would form their
own company and trade across the border into the United States. Under the leadership of Louis Riel,
son of the earlier leader, there would be two rebellions, the first
resulting in the establishment of Manitoba, and the final North-West
Rebellion of 1885 that was crushed by the new Dominion of Canada.
Meanwhile the British North American Exploring
Expedition or Palliser Expedition explored and surveyed the open
prairies and wilderness of western Canada from 1857 to 1860—all here-to-fore
the domain of the Hudson Bay Company.
The Expedition was charged with finding a possible rail route to
the Pacific. But it also issued a report
that while discouraging immediate settlement showed that much of the prairie
was likely prime agricultural land.
The Company had always maintained that the west was entirely unsuitable
to settlement to protect its fur trade.
The Hudson Bay Company coat of arms. Simplified versions are still used by the company.
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When the consortium of the International
Financial Society became the majority stockholder in 1863, it began looking
for new infusions of cash just as Canada was emerging as a quasi-independent
Canadian Confederation. In 1869
the company approved the return of Rupert’s Land to Britain which in
turn gave it to Canada and loaned the new country the £300,000 required to
compensate for its losses. The Deed of Surrender came into force the
following year. The Northwest Territories was brought under Canadian
jurisdiction under the terms of the Rupert’s Land Act 1868, by the Parliament
of the United Kingdom. The Deed enabled the admission of the fifth province, Manitoba
to the Confederation on 15 July 1870.
Although fur trading remained a cornerstone of the
business, the influx of settlers into the Prairie Provinces and British
Columbia transformed trading posts into mercantile stores, selling
directly to settlers for cash. Over vast
areas of rural Canada Hudson Bay Company operated virtually the only local
stores. The first such shop was
established as early as 1857 at Fort Langley on the Frazier River. Other stores soon followed.
Hudson Bay cash stores served immigrant farmers and tradesmen across the Prairie Provinces in the second half of the 19th Century.
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In 1913 Hudson Bay entered the Department Store business
with a grand new store in Calgary Alberta, quickly followed by more big
stores in Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria, Saskatoon,
and Winnipeg. After World War
I the company expanded with store in Ontario and Quebec.
As retail sales became an ever bigger part of the
business, the Hudson Bay Company began retreating from the fur trade and
diversifying into real estate holdings and Petroleum companies. Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Company (HBOG)
became a major Canadian oil producer in combination with other producers and
consolidation and began exporting oil to US refineries by pipeline to Billings,
Montana. After a severe dip in
international oil prices, the Company sold its controlling interest in HBOG and
exited the energy business.
The Hudson Bay department store in Winnipeg in a tinted post card from the 1920's.
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Shortly after, it ended its participation in the fur
trade, which had become a public relations nightmare for the
company over the annual baby seal hunts in the arctic. It sold all of its remote Northern
trading posts and fur business in 1987,
By that time the Hudson Bay Company had ceased to be
a British corporation under Royal Charter.
Due to heavy taxation in Britain, the company dissolved it Royal
Charter on its 300th anniversary in 1970, moved its headquarters to Winnipeg,
and became a Canadian company.
The company aggressively moved into greater and
greater retail operations, buying up one after another established chains
including Morgan’s allowing it to expand into Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton,
and Ottawa. It re-branded all
stores as The Bay. More chains
were acquired, including the Zellers discount store, Simpson’s. Through a succession of majority owners,
most notably billion are Kenneth Thompson and his family from 1970-97,
the Hudson Bay Company continued to gobble up competitors large and small
including Tower Department Stores, Woodward’s, and K-Mart Canada.
The
company is now owned by NRDC Equity Partners, an American equity
trading corporation which already controlled Lord & Taylor luxury
department stores. It transferred
management of Lord & Taylor to the Hudson Bay Company. In 2013 it also purchased another flagship
luxury chain, Sax Fifth Avenue.
Like most
major retailers Hudson Bay has suffered from losses to on-line shopping. In
2017 it separated management to the HBC and Sax chains, cut 7000 jobs, and has
been closing some stores.
Today the company still operates hundreds of
stores in the United States and Canada, But
it still sells those trade blankets at its Hudson Bay Stores—and gets a pretty
penny for them, too.
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