"All the historical books which contain
no lies are extremely tedious." Anatole France
(1844-1924).
The history of Hudson's Hope needs
no lies to make it interesting. Where else
can one tread in the paths - even in the very
footsteps themselves - of three-storey high
dinosaurs? Follow the raging river that transported
Alexander Mackenzie to his destination of the
Pacific Ocean . . . . even paddle a canoe over
the now placid Dinosaur Lake which covers the
Rocky Mountain Canyon where Mackenzie had to
arduously haul his canoe up the steep cliffs
when he realized he would not win against the
river's wrath?
And then come the legends . . . . of mysteries
so complex many have never been solved . .
. . the mysterious slaying of the "Danes" in
1918 . . . . one body found in the cabin shot
10 times with a 303 British rifle, the other
found much later on the flat west of Hudson's
Hope, burned almost beyond recognition . .
. the death of the astronomer whose body was
found in the spring by tracing his footsteps
that eerily resurfaced as the snow melted .
. . the mysterious disappearance of Bob Porter,
fur buyer, in the Black Canyon. When his body
was found months later his money belt containing
$2,000 fur buying money was gone, although
he was still wearing the trousers the belt
had been attached to . . . . then there's the
tale of George Clark who defied Death by water
one fine October day, the 22nd to be exact,
at 10:00 in the morning . . . . only to have
Death claim Her due exactly three years later,
on October 22nd. Time of death? 10:00 in
the morning.
These and other legends are preserved in the
Museum in Hudson's Hope. Housed in the old
Hudson's Bay Company store, the same walls
that once supported supplies for trappers,
guides and outfitters, the store that once
sold the bright ribbons to Indians whose decorated
horses then raced up and down the flat in front
of the old store, now displays our legends
for all visitors to see.
Let me tell you a little of our history . .
. .
The first white explorer through the area was
Alexander Mackenzie in 1793 on his journey up
the Peace River, the only watercourse that completely
traverses the Rocky Mountains. By the early
1800s the Peace had become established by the
Nor'Westers as a major trade route through the
Rockies to their posts at Fort McLeod and Fort
St. James in New Caledonia. The economy of the
area was based on the lucrative fur trade.
Alexander Mackenzie found only a few Indian tepees
dotting the banks of the river when he made his
epic trip in 1793; even then, though, the area
amazed him for its beauty, its ruggedness, and,
with an eye to commerce, its vast quantities
of excellent coal. The Aylard Mine, once located
part way between Hudson's Hope and the Bennett
Dam, worked on a coal seam eight feet thick,
composed of top quality semi-anthricite, which
left only 3 per cent ash. The old donkey boiler
from this mine can be seen in the Museum's display
yard. Mackenzie, and others who followed, saw
these coal seams in the rock cliffs . . . they
saw the available lumber, the agreeable climate
and the great river for transportation and power.
Mackenzie's diary also commented on another of
our singular features: in the area of the Gething
and Aylard Creeks, it was noted that one could
burn a shoe while standing on certain cracks
in the earth, from which emitted heat, smoke
and a stench of sulphur. These rose coloured
sandstone areas are the result of low burning
underground fires, and can still be seen below
the Bennett Dam. Where else can one's eyes view
Heaven, while one's feet are smoking from the
fires of Hell?
Fort Hudson's Hope was originally known as Rocky Mountain Portage Fort, built
by Simon Fraser in the autumn of 1805 at the foot of the Rocky Mountain Canyon
on the north bank of the river. Operated for a time by the Hudson's Bay Company
after its coalition with the North West Company in 1821, it was abandoned for
a time in 1825 to punish the Indians for a massacre at Fort St. John in 1823.
New Hudson's Hope was built about 1875 on the
south bank about 12 miles further upstream
near the east end of the canyon, at its foot.
Some time after 1880 this post was again moved
to its present location on the north side,
on a seven-acre site surveyed out and still
remaining in the name of the Hudson's Bay Company,
except for portions sold to the Anglican Church
and the Hudson's Hope Historical Society.
The town of Hudson's Hope is situated on an
unbroken flat of land running parallel to the
peace River for five miles, with an average
width of two miles.
The name "Hudson's Hope" has been recorded as
early as 1869. Although the origin of the name
is another of our unsolved mysteries, there are
several conjectures as to how the name was given:
it was named after an old prospector named Hudson
or Hodgson who "hoped" to make a strike here.
It was named for the Hudson's Bay Company in
their establishment of a post here, the farthest
point of navigation before the portage. The
word "hope" has also been traced to an old meaning,
(SOED, NED, Hope, sb2) being "a small enclosed
valley, especially a smaller opening branching
out from the main dale and running up to the
mountain ranges; the upland part of a mountain
valley; a blind valley." These meanings were
used to the end of the 19th century and place
names ending "hope" were quite common in Scotland
and north-eastern England. Whatever its origin,
people here like the name and don't worry too
much about from whence it came. Hudson's Hope
is not a town that seeks out pedigrees. The
losing of our "apostrophe S" is another matter,
however. All throughout our historical documents,
the name has been recorded as "Hudson's Hope."
Somehow (again subject to legend) around 1915
the postal authorities omitted the " 's" on their
rubber stamp and continued to omit it, although
the postmaster, mining recorders and Hudson's
Bay Company continued to use it for many years
thereafter. We are now legally the "District
of Hudson's Hope, Hudson's Hope, B.C.". A queer
lot, to be sure.
Hudson's Hope continued to be an important navigational
point because of the impassable rapids above
the town. Settlers and supplies were freighted
in from Lake Athabasca at first, then later
from Peace River Crossing when the railway
reached that point. The sternwheelers, beginning
with Bishop Grouard's 'St. Charles' in 1903
broke the eternal silence of the North with
their sharp whistles and easier ingress of
settlers. This boat operated the 525 miles
between the rapids called Vermilion Chutes
to Hudson's Hope. In 1905 the Hudson's Bay
Company put their sternwheeler, SS Peace River,
into operation; it was a 110' long vessel that
could carry 40 tons of freight. The book, "North
With Peace River Jim" written in 1910 and recently
published by the Glenbow Foundation of Calgary,
gives us a flavour of those days:
"Lying up against the far bank, when we arrived,
was the little white Hudson's Bay steamer, Peace
River, 'Coaling up' with cordwood, slid down
a 200' chute to the river bank and packed on
board by the half-breed hands.
". . . . As the boat pulled out, the citizens
and entire population of Peace River Crossing
gathered on the bank and gave us god-speed and
good wishes. We responded with three cheers
and a tiger. Three half-breeds with load rifles
knelt on the bank and fired the royal salute,
with rifle muzzles pointed skyward and the butts
on the ground. Again we cheered and again the
salute crackled out, then the steamer swung wide
and took the big turn, and the current and the
sternwheeler paddles soon took us from the sight
of the beautiful Peace River Crossing."
The SS Peace River (a model of which may be seen
at the Peace Canyon Dam Visitors Center), was
replaced by the Athabasca River in 1915, which
could carry 100 tons, and again by the famous
D.A. Thomas which ran the river from 1919-1929.
Built at a cost of $119,000, she could carry
100 passengers and more than 200 tons of freight.
Optimism about the Hudson's Hope coal fields
convinced her owner, Baron Rhondda, a Welsh coal
millionaire, so that he had oil tanks installed
into the boat. However, in its entire career,
the D.A. Thomas burned only cordwood cut in four-foot
lengths, and lots of it.
Several smaller boats navigated the Peace, most
belonging to sawmill companies such as the Diamond
P's "Grenfall" and Peterson's "Pine Pass". From
1920 to 1952 the Hudson's Bay Company operated
a fleet of motorships on the Peace. The first
was the Weenusk, which operated from 1920 to
1940 on diesel engines. In 1940 it was replaced
by the Weenusk II, which operated until 1951.
Another unique enterprise in Hudson's Hope was
Jack Pollon's lime kiln situated on the lime
bed beneath the spring that gushes out, summer
and winter, on the riverbank below the present
town water pump. The first batch of lime was
burned in 1932, and by the 40s it was being shipped
by the Hudson's Bay boats to all points in the
Peace and north to the Bering Sea. One can still
see the base of the old rock kiln, although local
residents will never again smell the carbon burn-off
smoke from the kilns, nor will the Hudson's Bay
Company house ever again feel the rattle of falling
pebbles from the blast of black powder.
The boats no longer come, although many people
still living in Hudson's Hope remember clearly
the excitement of the shrill call of the boats,
for it indeed represented not only transportation
and freight shipments, but a reassurance that
Hudson's Hope was part of the ever-quickening
pace of the outside world. Sometimes we still
need that assurance, but the whistle will no
longer come from the river, but from the great
silent black caves of coal that have waited for
other aspects of development to catch up, or
slow down, so its tremendous potential can once
again be realized.
In 1901 Neil Gething and W.J. "Steel" Johnson
discovered this coal in the Peace Canyon but
had to wait until 1908 before the "Peace River
Block" was opened by the Federal Government
to mineral staking. By 1911 and 1912 the Peace
region was gradually being settled by homesteaders,
who recognized the resources of the country.
The problem . . . . transportation. As early
as 1878 a rail line was proposed through the
Peace River Pass to the Skeena area. In the
early 1900s it was again proposed and a Federal
Charter was taken out to construct a railway
from the Peace River Block west through the Peace-Finlay
area to Stewart (approximately 120 miles north
of Prince Rupert). D.A. Thomas had taken out
leases on the coal deposits of Carbon Creek and
also had a rail charter from Edmonton to the
Pacific via either the Nass or Skeena Rivers.
In 1915 the Dominion Telegraph reached Hudson's
Hope from Fort St. John and a wagon road was
extended from Hudson's Hope to East Pine. World
War I put a stop to local progress
In 1923 the first load of coal was barged downstream
to Peace River Crossing, the head of the Edmonton-Dunvegan
and BC Railway. But it wasn't until the construction
of the Alaska Highway in 1942 that Hudson's Hope
coal was in demand.
Dawson Creek was allocated as the railhead of
the Northern Alberta Railway. In 1952 the Hart
Highway was extended north through the Pine Pass
to link the Peace with the southern portion of
the province, leaving Hudson's Hope somewhere
in the middle. It was Axel Weenergren's resource
development plans that centred Hudson's Hope
in the picture of progress by his plan to harness
the power of the Peace. The rest is modern history.
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