
A young boy grows up on the edge of the Canadian frontier, surrounded by the rhythms of the forest, lake, and prairie. His early years are marked by lively canoe trips, lessons from Indigenous friends, and the occasional adventure with his father, who moves from a modest teaching post to a position with the Hudson’s Bay Company. Through school, family relocations, and the occasional storm on the Great Lakes, he learns to balance curiosity with the hard realities of frontier life.
When he finally joins his father’s expedition into the far north, the landscape opens up into endless rivers and rugged wilderness. On steamboats and in modest trading posts, he confronts fierce weather, learns to navigate icy waters, and discovers a talent for hunting and dog‑driving. These formative experiences forge his resilience and set the stage for a life defined by the untamed beauty and challenges of western Canada.
Full title
Forest, Lake and Prairie Twenty Years of Frontier Life in Western Canada—1842-62
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (225K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2020-03-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1842–1917
A Methodist minister, missionary, and writer on the Canadian frontier, he left vivid accounts of life across the Prairies and the boreal north. His books blend memoir, travel writing, and firsthand history from a period of rapid change in western Canada.
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