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Welcome to
the Peter Pond Society
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MAY
2000. PETER POND SOCIETY NEWSLETTER, Number 1
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Updating some of my earlier notations, several
places in Canada commemorating Peter Pond no longer exist,
at least temporarily. Here is a rundown:
1. The cairn honoring Pond that sits along the North Branch
of the Saskatchewan River outside of Prince Albert, SK has
been removed. Why? Because the Batoche National Historic Site
that oversees the area had to save it from the encroaching
river. Someone I know in Prince Albert tipped me off, and
I recently got confirmation from the Batoche official in the
following email:
"Mr. McDonald,
The cairn was removed from the site last fall. Continual
river erosion to the bank has resulted in a substantial
loss of the site itself. Discussion with the City of Prince
Albert to relocate the plaque commemorating Peter Pond have
started.
Flo Miller
Site Manager, Batoche."
So, apparently the cairn itself is no longer, but the plaque
will be relocated someplace else. I find this fascinating,
since rivers have played such a big part in Pond's history.
First, rivers are what conveyed him to this spot in the first
place to trade with Indians, then pool goods amongst other
traders and be the first white man over Methye Portage and
into history in 1778. O.C. Furniss of University of Saskatchwan,
when he found evidence of the Pond encampment in 1942 leading
to a cairn being erected in 1950, did so with the river's
help. Old narratives said Pond's house was on the Saskatchewan
about 1/8 mile from the mouth of the Sturgeon River. When
he first started looking 1/8 mile from the Sturgeon, he found
nothing. But then from a plane he saw river action had placed
the mouth of the Sturgeon at two different locations east
of its current site over the years. So Furniss paced off from
the most easterly former location and sure enough found what
he was after. After digging three or four feet down, he found
flat hearthstones arranged in semi-circular shape identical
to other fireplaces of other old trading camps found in the
past. Digging through a layer of old sandy silt showed this
had been flooded before. And now, in the year 2000, the river
was trying to reclaim the cairn itself. (Source: "Some notes
on newly discovered fur posts on the Saskatchewan River,"
Canadian Historical Review, XXIV, No. 3, Sept. 1943.)
2. Sources in Fort McMurray, Alberta say the Peter Pond School
is no longer there. It was closed and torn down about five
years ago, replaced by small strip mall of several stores.
No plans mentioned to build a new school or rename an existing
one after him. The stone cairn by the school with a plaque
honoring Pond as the first white man through the area followed
by the likes of Sir Alexander Mackenzie, Sir John Franklin
and Sir George Simpson (N.B. Pond was called "Sir Peter" in
his declining days in Milford, but no evidence exists on an
actual knighthood) was carefully moved a block down to in
front of the public schools office. I hope the Prince Albert
folks are careful, too. The hotel? The name has been changed
from Peter Pond Hotel to Peter Pond Travelodge. But there
still is a Peter Pond Shopping Center, so far.
3. Hope they still keep the lake in Saskatchewan south of
Methye Portage named after him. It did have another name before
getting his, that being Buffalo Lake or Lac du Boeuf. The
town of Buffalo Narrows still exists on the lake, a nod to
the previous name. Buffalo Narrows has a nice web site, noting
the name comes from Indians driving buffalo into the lake
to swim through the narrows where they could be easily slaughtered
with spears and arrows. Buffalo horns and skulls still line
the lake bottom in this area.
That's about all for the first PPS Newsletter. Not sure when
the next one will come out -- whenever time and suitable material
permit. Stay tuned. Would anyone like to think up a newsletter
name in the meantime, e.g., "Call of the North" or "Le Clarion"?
Email me your thoughts on this and any other Pond-related
topics.
See you on the river and au revoir,
Bill
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This is the plaque (English
and French text) set on a pyramid cairn just outside Prince
Albert, SK, on the north branch of the Saskatchewan River.
As of Summer 2000, city and federal federal officials
were searching for a new site for the plaque due to river
incursion. English text reads: "Peter Pond, 1740-1807.
In the spring of 1778 a group of Canadian traders who
had wintered at a post on this site pooled their remaining
stock of trade goods and sent one of their number, Peter
Pond, into the Athabasca country, thereby opening one
of the richest fur areas on the continent. Pond was one
of the original partners of the North West Company until
his implication in two murders forced him to withdraw
from the trade and retire to his native Connecticut in
1790. His discoveries and geographical theories had a
profound influence on the explorations of Alexander Mackenzie
who succeeded him in Athabasca." |
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| Pine Portage rapids on
the lower Clearwater River, about a half day below Methye
Portage. This is the second to last set of rapids, the
last being Cascade, before the Clearwater becomes flat
for another three days' paddle to Fort McMurray, Alberta,
at the confluence of the Athabasca River. |
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Whitemud (Terre Blanche)
Falls, three hours below Methye Portage on the lower Clearwater
River. This is the first set of rapids after Methye, followed
by Pine and Cascade, before the river flattens out for
another 60 miles to the Athabasca River |
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| A lone red canoe is virtually
swallowed up by the wide, meandering expanse of the lower
Clearwater Valley just below Methye Portage. |
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The northern terminus of
Methye Portage as mist lifts off green hills during a
gentle rain. Peter Pond doubtless saw the same view in
1778 as the first white man to confront the Clearwater
River. |
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| A section Methye Portage
has worn deep into the earth as it climbs the hill up
to Mackenzie Viewpoint above the Clearwater River. The
trail was the only fur trade access to the riches of the
Athabasca District and Mackenzie River watershed for 100
years after Peter Pond first crossed it in 1778. |
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The only visible acknowledgement
to Peter Pond in Milford, CT, the town where he was born
and died, is on the nation's bicentennial marker on the
town green. He is listed among other famous residents
like Connecticut Governor Charles Hobby Pond and submarine
inventor Simon Lake. Look closely and discern the words
"explorer Peter Pond" on the third line from the bottom
off to the right. |
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| This plaque in Fort McMurray,
Alberta, honoring Pond as the first white man across Methye
Portage some 100 miles upriver can be clearly read. The
plaque was moved in the mid 1990's from in front of the
former Peter Pond School, demolished to be replaced by
a small shopping center. The plaque and cairn now sit
a few blocks away in front of the Board of Education building.
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A likeness of Peter Pond was never made in his lifetime.
This illustration was done to accompany my article on
Pond published in the March 1984 issue of "Canoe" Magazine.
The artist is Illona Petrovitz Viehman, wife of the
magazine's then editor, John Viehman, current editor
of "Backpacker" Magazine. Interestingly, he and Michael
Peake, editor of Che-Mun, took a canoe trip retracing
part of Mackenzie's voyage to the Pacific, the subject
of an "Anyplace Wild" Public Broadcasting System television
program shown in the fall of 1999. Che-Mun, a quarterly
newsletter of Canadian wilderness canoeing, is among
my links.
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| A part of Mackenzie's portrait
by Sir Thomas Lawrence, currently hanging in the National
Gallery of Canada, as it was used in a pamphlet honoring
him during the bicentennial observance of his successful
1793 voyage. This pamphlet commemorated the cross-Canada
voyage done for the bicentennial over three years on the
historic fur trade route by a group of students and faculty
from Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario. They arrived
at Mackenzie Rock on the Pacific Coast the exact July
day he did 200 years before. I have a video tape of their
voyage showing what they did was truly admirable. |
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