
In 1778 a sleek American sloop, the Ranger, slips into the quiet inlet of St Mary’s Isle, its deck bristling with cannons and a secret mission. Captain John Paul Jones, the audacious commander, believes he may finally confront the Earl of Selkirk, a man he suspects to be his father. The raid is swift—servants are terrorized, silver and plate are looted, and the ship departs before the lord can answer the door. The sudden intrusion leaves the estate’s gardens echoing with the clang of muskets and the bewildered gaze of a young boy.
The boy witnessing it is Thomas Douglas, barely seven and the youngest of seven Selkirk sons. The dramatic raid imprints a vivid memory that will later drive his ambitions far beyond the Scottish coast. As the story progresses, we glimpse ancient priory ruins, rugged wilderness, and the bold vision of a family intent on founding a new settlement in distant North America. These opening scenes set the tone for a saga of adventure, idealism, and the clash of cultures that will birth the Red River Colony.
Full title
The Red River Colony A Chronicle of the Beginnings of Manitoba
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (177K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2009-09-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1883–1955
Best remembered for writing lively, accessible Canadian history, this early 20th-century author helped bring stories from the Red River colony and the Six Nations to a wider readership. His books are compact, readable introductions that still reflect a strong interest in Canada's political and frontier past.
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