The Beaver, Vol. 1, No. 05, February, 1921

audiobook

The Beaver, Vol. 1, No. 05, February, 1921

by Hudson's Bay Company

EN·~2 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

Transcriber's Note: Larger images of the photographs with the exception of cover may be seen by clicking on the images.

0:09
2

The Beaver A Journal of Progress

0:15
3

H.B.C. Pioneer Steamer Ruled West Coast Trade 20 Years

9:25
4

LITTLE JOURNEYS TO FUR TRADE POSTS OF THE HUDSON’S BAY CO.

18:28
5

A Remarkable Trip by U.S.A. Airmen in a Free Balloon

5:33
6

The Beaver

24:24
7

LETHBRIDGE

1:15
8

NELSON, B.C.

0:32
9

FEATURING BONNIE BABIES

3:19
10

H.B.C. Helped Settlers Remain on Land During “Lean Years”

7:36

Description

A vivid snapshot of early twentieth‑century life unfolds in this issue, beginning with a charming portrait of Little Miss Ouikpigak, a young Inuit girl from Great Whale River whose father hunts for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Her simple delight in seal fat, described as “candy,” offers a tender glimpse into the everyday joys and traditions of a remote community, while the accompanying photographs bring the scene to life.

The heart of the issue is a richly illustrated essay on the steamship Beaver, the first iron‑hulled vessel to ply the Pacific Northwest. Readers learn how the ship was built in London, launched under royal eyes, and then braved Cape Horn to reach the West Coast. Once there, the Beaver became a vital link for settlers, a protector of fledgling forts, and a swift enforcer of law in the rugged frontier, shaping the early growth of British Columbia’s coastal towns.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (117K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Bryan Ness, Emmy and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2014-09-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HB

Hudson's Bay Company

Born as a 17th-century fur-trading venture, this company grew into one of the most recognizable names in Canadian history. Its story spans empire, commerce, colonization, and retail reinvention over more than three and a half centuries.

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