Alexander Mackenzie, From Canada
by land
John Donaldson
Sir Alexander Mackenzie was born in 1764, in
Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis off the West Coast of Scotland. He
traveled to New York with his father and then w ent
to school in Montreal. In 1779, he entered a company that eventually
joined with other Montreal firms involved in the fur trade, forming
the North West Company. Mackenzie became a determined young fur
trader who ultimately found his way overland across Canada, to the
Arctic and Pacific Oceans.
In June 1789, Mackenzie embarked on his first remarkable journey
from Fort Chipewyan (on the shore of Lake Athabasca, now NE
Alberta). He was accompanied on the canoe expedition by
French-Canadian voyageurs and Indian hunters and interpreters. They
discovered the De Cho River, now known as the Mackenzie River, and
traveled with it to the Arctic Ocean before returning to Fort
Chipewyan in September of the same year.
In October 1792, Mackenzie again left Lake Athabasca in search of
the elusive Northwest Passage. Traveling along the Peace River, he
arrived at his winter quarters in Fort Fork after three weeks of
paddling. Mackenzie set out again in May of the following year
together with Alexander McKay, French-Canadian voya geurs,
Indian hunters and interpreters. Following the Parsnip, McGregor and
Fraser Rivers through the Rocky Mountains, they then headed west on
foot along 2000 year old trails of the Carrier Aboriginal Nation,
After a gruelling journey over the coastal mountains they reached
the Pacific Ocean where, on a prominent rock near Bella Coola,
Mackenzie wrote:
"Alexander Mackenzie from Canada by land, the twenty-second of
July, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three."
Returning by the same route, Mackenzie and his expedition arrived
back at Fort Fork in August 1793. His dangerous journey would not
have been successful without the cooperation of the native people.

Mackenzie wrote a book about his travels that brought him fame and
fortune. He became a celebrity in Britain and, in 1802, King George
III knighted him for his outstanding Canadian explorations.
Mackenzie died in 1820 and was buried in Avoch, near Inverness,
Scotland.
In an interesting twist of history, Mackenzie's voyages across North
America were recognized by Napoleon as the means by which he could
embark on a re-conquest of Canada. Napoleon, in an intrigue that had
all the makings of a spy thriller, arranged for Mackenzie's book to
be smuggled from England and translated into French. Mackenzie's
description of the Western Canada river system was so precise that
Napoleon, languishing in prison, gave orders to Bernadotte, his key
Marshall, to lay out a strategic plan to retake New France.
Mackenzie, thus became an unwitting accomplice by providing the
navigational details to invade Canada by a surprise attack from New
Orleans, via the Mississippi River. |
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Bruce's notes: John
Donaldson is one very interesting guy. At the age of 60,
armed with a canoe and a sense of adventure, he began a quest
that saw him trace the steps and paddle dips of Alexander
Mackenzie from Montreal to the Arctic and to the west coast of
BC. He chronicled his adventure in a wonderful book
entitled,
A Canoe Quest in the Wake of Canada's "Prince of Explorers".
The web site of Significant Scots (http://www.electricscotland.com)
described John as a
neurological biochemist with a primary interest in the role of
trace metals in the brain. In the industrial milieu, he was
formerly a vice-president, scientific affairs and head of
molecular biology in the pharmaceutical industry. In the
academic area, Donaldson has served as Associate Professor of
Pharmacology at the University of Manitoba and as Professeur
Agrere at the Universite de Montreal. He holds a BSc in
chemistry, an MSc, in microbiology and a PhD in experimental
medicine, all gained at McGill University, Montreal. He is a
former Garfield Weston scholar in medical research, as well as
the recipient of several awards from the American Parkinson's
Research Foundation.
John grew up in Scotland and came to Canada in 1955. Following
an active academic and industrial career, he and his wife,
Ishbel, now live in Kingston, Ontario, They are proud parents
and grandparents, love the great outdoors and have traveled
extensively. In addition to canoeing, John is a keen dinghy
sailor and light aircraft pilot. He has a great interest in
Scottish history, the history of the Canadian fur trade,
aviation history and the history of World War II. On the
spiritual side, John is a lay oblate of the Benedictine Order
and follows Christian meditation.
John's book is available on
Canada Books Online. |
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