The Company of Adventurers: A Narrative of Seven Years in the Service of the Hudson's Bay Company during 1867-1874
F**Y
As advertised.
The item was as advertised and received quickly.
B**Z
Life on the Canadian Plains in the 1870s
Isaac Cowie sailed to Canada from the Shetland Islands in 1867 with prospects of joining the Hudson's Bay Company. After arriving at York Factory via Hudson Bay, he was assigned to Fort Qu'Appelle, where he remained until 1874, the last two years as manager. Cowie kept a journal (now lost) during these years from which he wrote a series of articles for a Manitoba newspaper that was published in 1912; a year later the series was issued in book form, a reprint of which is presented here.The first hundred some-odd pages include a brief history of the HBC and Cowie's voyage to Canada. Once at Fort Qu'Appelle in southern Saskatchewan the book's focus on the life of an HBC official and western frontiersman begins in earnest. Cowie relates fur trading activities, frequent trips to outlying posts (one in the middle of a blizzard), and relations with the Indians, especially the Metis - mixed-bloods who began to see themselves as a separate tribe. Chapters are divided into numerous subsections, often each one relating a separate vignette or impression. Cowie is content with describing routine business, occasionally mentioning an interesting character here and there. No one will accuse him of exaggeration or embellishing incidents to make them more dramatic - that's just not in his character. The most valuable information in the book has to do with the Indians and the growing unrest that was occurring across the plains after 1869, especially with some of the tribes (Sioux, Cree) who had ventured across the border from the US hoping for better treatment, which was wishful thinking only. The book ends in 1874 when Cowie was relieved of his duties and, as he says, "the Mounted Police took effective possession of the plains." Not the most exciting first-hand account of one's experiences in the western regions, it's still a valuable account of life on the Canadian plains and in the employ of the HBC.
C**R
Disappointed in Kindle version
I guess htere is no way to return a Kindle book. If there was I would get my money back. The Kindle edition of this book is not in the normal kindle format. It is just pictures of each page of the physical book. So you can't change the font size. Now I am not so blind that I need my fonts at a super big size but this book is unreadable on the phone. Ya I want a refund on this one.
T**R
good insight into a time not so long ago
I am from the area Cowie writes about and found his recounting offering a another yet also helpful perspective on what some might suggest was the last of the pre settlement "west"couple this book with Daschuks book (clearing the plains) and one gains sober insight into the lives of people on the plains in the 1800's, not very long ago!
A**R
Too much detail about dead people.
While this book gives an interesting overview of life on the early prairies, to get to it, you have to read through far too many mundane details about insignificant people and events.
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