Simon Fraser, the son of a Loyalist…
October 1805 CE
Simon Fraser, the son of a Loyalist who died in prison during the American Revolution and a resident of Canada since the war, joins the North West Company in 1792.
Born on May 20, 1776 in the village of Mapletown, Hoosick Township, New York, Simon is the eighth and youngest child of Simon Fraser, descended from the Frasers of Culbokie and Guisachan, a cadet branch of the Frasers of Lovat, and Isabella Grant, daughter of the Laird of Daldregan.
His parents had immigrated from Scotland in 1773.
His father, not to be confused with the general of the same name, was a loyalist captain who died in prison after being captured during the Battle of Bennington.
Fraser's mother had moved the family to Canada after the war ended, settling near present-day Cadillac, Quebec.
Fraser had moved to Montreal at the age of fourteen, and, after receiving some additional schooling, had been apprenticed to the North West Company two years later.
Two of Fraser’s uncles are active in the fur trade, which is a major part of the commercial life of Montreal at this time, and the Frasers are related to Simon McTavish, a leading figure in the North West Company.
Between 1792 and 1805, it would appear that Fraser has spent most of his time working in the company's Athabasca Department.
While little is known of his activities during this time, Fraser seems to have done well, as he was made a full partner of the company in 1801 at the relatively young age of twenty-four.
The North West Company had commissioned Alexander Mackenzie in 1789 to find a navigable river route to the Pacific Ocean.
The route he discovered in 1793—ascending the West Road River and descending the Bella Coola River—had opened up new sources of fur but proved to be too difficult to be practicable as a trading route to the Pacific.
Fraser is thus given responsibility for extending operations to the country west of the Rockies in 1805.
Mackenzie’s expeditions had been primarily reconnaissance trips, while Fraser’s assignment, by contrast, reflects a definite decision to build trading posts and take possession of the country, as well as to explore travel routes.
Fraser begins ascending the Peace River in the autumn of 1805, establishing the trading post of Rocky Mountain Portage House (present day Hudson's Hope) just east of the Peace River Canyon of the Rocky Mountains.