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Collection - North West Company | McCord Museum
Image Not Availablefor Compagnie du Nord-Ouest
Compagnie du Nord-Ouest
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Collection

North West Company
Date February 15, 1796-August 1, 1859
Dimensions6 cm of textual records.
Object NumberC104
CollectionMcCord
CreditGift of David Ross McCord, Mrs. Joachim Carton, de Lery MacDonald, Seymour Schulich, Governor John McIntyre and Dr. W. D. Lighthall
Administrative History

Founded in 1779, the North West Company (NWC) dominated the fur trade sector from the late 18th to the early 19th century in Canada. Its explorations of North America led to the mapping of many areas that were previously unknown to French and British colonists. After the British Conquest, Montreal's French-speaking merchants were largely replaced by Anglo-Americans, Englishmen and Scotsmen. Many independent merchants viewed it as an opportunity to enter the fur trade. In 1779, the NWC was created by a group of Montreal merchants, mostly of Scottish origin, who wanted to reduce competition amongst themselves and pool their resources to compete with the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in the fur trade. It was originally divided into 16 shares, owned by 9 different firms: McTavish & Co., Wadden & Co., Ross & Co., Oakes & Co., Benjamin & Joseph Frobisher, Todd & McGill, McGill & Paterson, McBeath & Co. and Holmes & Grant. This agreement was renewed periodically between 1780 and 1783.

The tenuous partnership lasted until 1783, when some of the NWC shareholders entered into a more formal contract. The signatories were Benjamin and Joseph Frobisher, Simon McTavish, Robert Grant, Nicholas Montour, Patrick Small, William Holmes, Peter Pond and George McBeath. Montreal's Beaver Club was also founded at around this time by several members (1785). However, the 1783 reorganization led to increased competition with another Montreal firm, Gregory, McLeod & Co., which was supported by John Ross, one of the original NWC partners. Following Ross' death under suspicious circumstances involving Peter Pond, an explorer and NWC partner, the rival companies merged in 1787.

From 1787 to 1804, the NWC extended its influence beyond the very profitable region of Lake Athabasca, where it was already well established. Explorers associated with the NWC, such as Alexander Mackenzie, crossed the Rockies to expand the known trade routes. They established several trading posts throughout the Northwest area of the continent. This expansion was partially motivated by the signing of Jay's Treaty in 1794. This agreement to settle the boundary between British and US territory blocked Canadian access to Grand Portage on Lake Superior, as the area became part of the United States.

At the same time, the NWC faced increasing competition in the Northwest from two new companies, the XY Company (Forsyth, Richardson & Co.) and Parker, Gerrard and Ogilvy. In 1800, both of the NWC's rivals merged under the name of the XY Company. This period was also marked by internal tension between the NWC's Montreal partners and "winterers" (partners who would winter over in the Northwest), with some of the latter joining the competition. After the 1804 death of Simon McTavish, who was a leader in the company's first years of existence and the head of the Montreal partners, the NWC took over the XY, reducing some of the tension that was hurting its business.

From 1804 to 1811, NWC partners Simon Fraser and David Thompson continued exploring Western Canada, once again expanding the company's area of operations and enabling it to stay ahead of the HBC. However, the long rivalry between the two fur trading giants drove the HBC to grant land to Thomas Douglas, the Earl of Selkirk, in 1811. Douglas established the Red River Colony right in the middle of the NWC's transportation and supply network, leading to disputes between the company's members and colonists. On June 19, 1816, the Battle of Seven Oaks between the two factions left 21 dead. A month later, the Earl of Selkirk and his men captured Fort William, the main NWC trading post.

These events, the associated legal problems and the increasingly higher cost of engaging in the fur trade from sea to sea exacerbated old tensions between the Montreal partners and winterers. In 1820, the two companies sent representatives to London to negotiate with the British government. The winterers, who wished to reach an agreement with the HBC, were excluded from these discussions. The Montrealers, negotiating from a position weakened by internal and external tensions, gave in to the demands of the HBC. The two companies merged in July 1821, restoring the Hudson's Bay Company's monopoly of the fur trade and marking the end of the North West Company. Although it was supposed to share the profits equally and be run by a joint board, the new entity was quickly dominated by HBC partners and former NWC members became simple shareholders.

Sources:

Archives of Manitoba. (n.d.). North West Company. Retrieved from: http://pam.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/144/PAM_AUTHORITY/AUTH_DESC_DET_REP/SISN%201022?sessionsearch

Brown, J. (2007-2015). North West Company. In The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved from: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/north-west-company


Scope and Content

This collection focusses on the activities of the North West Company, primarily legal and accounting operations associated with the fur trade in Montreal and at its trading posts, such as Fort William and Fort Michilimackinac. It documents the admission of new partners, various legal actions concerning employees, the hiring of voyageurs, and merchandise transported by the company. Involving individuals such as John McDonald, Allan McDonell, Robert Henry and William McKay, these activities span the period 1796 to 1820. In addition, the collection chronicles the relationships among the Company's partners in 1796 and 1859, notably between Simon Fraser, Simon McTavish and John McDonald, as well as the company's institutional culture. It contains, for example, account statements, employee contracts, bills of lading, depositions and deeds of admission. Finally, several published documents illustrate how the company was perceived in the early 19th century.


Classification Scheme

C104 North West Company Collection
     
C104/A Constitution

     
C104/B Legal Affairs
          C104/B,1 The case of John Ogilvy v. Joseph Châle
          C104/B,2 The case of Samuel Gerrard v. Basil Dubois
          C104/B,3 Power of attorney
     
C104/C Accounting
          C104/C,1 Partners' account statements
          C104/C,2 Bills of lading
          C104/C,3 Promissory notes
          C104/C,4 Order form
     
C104/D Management of Human Resources
     
C104/E Correspondence
     
C104/F Commemoration
     
C104/G Publications about the North West Company


Notes

Source of title: Based on the contents of the collection.

Immediate source of acquisition: The documents in this collection are from various sources. The majority were assembled by David Ross McCord and John McIntyre (known as Governor McIntyre, he was a clerk and chief factor at Fort William from 1855 to 1877). Some were donated to the McCord Museum by various donors throughout the 20th century, such as Dr. William Douw Lighthall, Mrs. Joachim Carton and Seymour Schulich.

Arrangement: The archives are placed in folders, organized chronologically.

Personal documents produced by David Thompson and Simon McTavish (NWC partners) were removed from the collection in 2001 to create the David Thompson (P306) and Simon McTavish (P102) fonds.

Account statements dated after the NWC-HBC merger were removed and added to the Hudson's Bay Company Collection (P099) in 2019. A copy of Canadian Magazine (M10895), devoted to the 17th century fur trade, was transferred to the thematic collection of pamphlets (PHA) in 2019.

Language: The documents are in French and English.

Availability of other formats: This collection is also available in PDF form. It was digitized in 2019 as part of the "Forging Fur-ways: the North West Company Fur Trade Collection" project, in partnership with the McGill University Library's Rare Books and Special Collections Division , funded by the National Heritage Digitization Strategy and Library and Archives Canada.

Finding aids: There is a file containing documentation on the North West Company and a detailed inventory of the items.

Associated material:
The main groups of documents created by the North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company are preserved in the Archives of Manitoba.

Several other institutions hold groups of documents produced by the North West Company:

BAnQ: Collection Compagnie du Nord-Ouest (P255)

LAC: North West Company Fonds (R7904-0-1-E)
McGill University: Coppenrath Collection of Voyageur Contracts (MSG 1108)

Trent University Archives: North West Company fur traders licences Fonds (89-1069)

Related groups of records: The McCord Museum holds several groups of documents associated with the North West Company and its partners: the Maurice-Régis Blondeau (P098), McGillivray Family (P100), Simon McTavish (P102), William McKay (P178), Beaver Club (P305), David Thompson (P306), John McDonald of Garth (P655), and John Ogilvy (P730) fonds and the Hudson's Bay Company Collection (C099).

General note: The McCord Museum's Photography and Paintings, Prints and Drawings collections also include a number of iconographic archives associated with members of the North West Company and the fur trade.

 

Last Update: July 23, 2019


Status
Not on view

Information about the objects in our collection is updated to reflect new research findings. If you have any information to share regarding this object, please email reference.mccord@mccord-stewart.ca.

Information about rights and reproductions is available here.

Online Collections | McCord Museum - Montreal Social History Museum
Memorandum by Simon Fraser and John McDonald of Garth, the last two surviving partners in the North West Company
Memorandum by Simon Fraser and John McDonald of Garth, the last two surviving partners in the North West Company
1859/08/01
M18638
Publications about the North West Company
1811-1818
C104/G
Agreement between Augustin Roy and the North-West Company
Agreement between Augustin Roy and the North-West Company
1804
M2737
Deed of admission of Robert Henry as partner into the North West Company, with one share
Deed of admission of Robert Henry as partner into the North West Company, with one share
12 July 1810
M993.173.1
Hiring of Baptiste Réaume by the North West Company as an "engagé" for one year, Kamanaitiquia
Hiring of Baptiste Réaume by the North West Company as an "engagé" for one year, Kamanaitiquia
1804
M2738
Notarized voyageur contract between Michel Le Page and the North West Company
January 10, 1823
S001/C3.2,1.1.3
Notarized voyageur contract between Pierre Lemieux and the North West Company
October 15, 1811
S001/C3.2,1.1.2
North-West Company canoe No. 17 shipped from Fort William to Fort Frances, Lac la Pluie
North-West Company canoe No. 17 shipped from Fort William to Fort Frances, Lac la Pluie
1806
M2736
Bill of lading for canoe No. 25, North West Company, Lachine, QC, 1802
Bill of lading for canoe No. 25, North West Company, Lachine, QC, 1802
1802/05/06
M2735
Seven Years War in North America
1757-1766
C170
North West Company's Seal
North West Company's Seal
Anonymous
1957
M20542

This project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Azrieli Foundation and Canadian Heritage.