Chipewyan Dene warriors led by Matonabbee, accompanying…
July 1771 CE
Chipewyan Dene warriors led by Matonabbee, accompanying Hudson's Bay expedition led by Samuel Hearne, discover a group of local Copper Inuit camped by rapids approximately fifteen kilometers (nine point three miles) upstream from the mouth of the Coppermine.
Just after midnight on July 17, the Chipewyans set upon the unsuspecting Inuit camp and kill approximately twenty men, women and children.
Hearne is traumatized by the massacre, saying "...and I am confident that my features must have feelingly expressed how sincerely I was affected at the barbarous scene I then witnessed; even at this hour I cannot reflect on the transactions of that horrid day without shedding tears"; he names the waterfall Bloody Falls.
London-born, eleven when he entered the Royal Navy in 1758, Hearne had spent some time with Lord Hood; at the end of the Seven Years' War in 1763, he had taken service with the Hudson's Bay Company.
He had examined portions of the Hudson Bay coasts in 1768 with a view to improving the cod fishery, and from 1769 to 1772 has been employed in northwestern discovery, searching especially for certain copper mines described by natives.
His first attempt (from November 6, 1769) had failed through the desertion of his natives; his second (from February 23, 1770) through the breaking of his quadrant.
He has now embarked on his third expedition.
Towards the end of May 1771, Hearne had begun to notice that the Chipewyans accompanying him on his expedition had motives other than his planned survey of the Coppermine River.
On the party's arrival at Peshew Lake, Matonabbee, Hearne's guide and companion, and a number of the men accompanying Hearne began to make arrangements for their wives and children to be left behind.
Later on, when the party arrives at Clowey, each of the Chipewyan men crafts shields from thin boards, sixty centimeters (two feet) wide and ninety centimeters (three feet) long.
Hearne notes that his party is joined by a number of native who are solely interested in propagating a war against the Inuit.
In the travel narrative describing his journey, he claims that as the group advances north into Inuit territories, it becomes evident that his companions are gradually plotting an act of "savage", "shocking", and "brutish" violence.