Warburton Pike (1861-1915)

. August 1889 found Pike embarking by canoe from Fort Resolution on what he called "an ordinary shooting expedition" north of Great Slave Lake, where he hoped to "penetrate this unknown land, to see the musk-ox, and find out as much as I could about their habits, and the habits of the...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Cockburn, R.H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1985
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179
id ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65179
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivcalgaryojs
language English
topic Biographies
Canoeing
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hunting
Pike
Warburton
1861-1915
Travels
Starvation
Aylmer Lake
N.W.T
Back River
Nunavut
Bering Sea
Dease River
N.W.T./Nunavut
Fort Resolution region
Pelly River
Yukon
Stikine River
Alaska/British Columbia
spellingShingle Biographies
Canoeing
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hunting
Pike
Warburton
1861-1915
Travels
Starvation
Aylmer Lake
N.W.T
Back River
Nunavut
Bering Sea
Dease River
N.W.T./Nunavut
Fort Resolution region
Pelly River
Yukon
Stikine River
Alaska/British Columbia
Cockburn, R.H.
Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
topic_facet Biographies
Canoeing
Expeditions
Explorers
History
Hunting
Pike
Warburton
1861-1915
Travels
Starvation
Aylmer Lake
N.W.T
Back River
Nunavut
Bering Sea
Dease River
N.W.T./Nunavut
Fort Resolution region
Pelly River
Yukon
Stikine River
Alaska/British Columbia
description . August 1889 found Pike embarking by canoe from Fort Resolution on what he called "an ordinary shooting expedition" north of Great Slave Lake, where he hoped to "penetrate this unknown land, to see the musk-ox, and find out as much as I could about their habits, and the habits of the Indians who go in pursuit of them every year." Thus commenced the 14 months of hard travel, privation, and adventure described so vividly in Pike's classic book The Barren Ground of Northern Canada. For five months he explored and hunted with Beaulieu clan - "the biggest scoundrels I ever had to travel with" - and Yellowknives as far as the Coppermine country north of Lac de Gras. The trip was replete with austere satisfactions of the sort valued by this hardbitten Englishman: brutal weather, near starvation, and the company of half-breeds and Indians whose improvidence and untrustworthiness he despised but whose skills and powers of endurance moved him to admiration; he also relished competing with these men. On this, as on every trip he took, he travelled light and lived off the land, for he held well-provided expeditions in contempt. Pike wintered - not at all passively - at Resolution; then, on 7 May, bound for Back's Great Fish River, he started north again. Only Back himself (1833-1835) and Anderson and Stewart (1855) had been there before him. He was accompanied on this stiff canoe journey by James Mackinlay, the HBC factor at Fort Resolution, Murdo Mackay, a Company servant, and a mixed crew of natives. . After reaching Aylmer Lake, they descended the Back River as far as Beechey Lake; finding no Eskimos there, and given Pike's plans to head "outside" to British Columbia, they turned south on 25 July, returning by way of the Lockhart River and Pike's Portage. They took out at Resolution on 24 August. Two impatient days later, Pike departed for Quesnel, B.C., some 2700 km away. Mackay went with him. Having ascended the Peace and crossed the Rocky Mountain Portage to Twelve-Foot Davis's trading post, they were waylaid by snow and advised to wait for freeze-up before going farther. . Fiercely driven by Pike, retreating desperately, frostbitten, starving, feeding on their moccasins, they struggled back down the Parsnip. On 27 December, near death, they "crawled up the steep bank" to Davis's cabin and salvation. The Barren Ground of Northern Canada, substantial, candid, compelling, was popular for many years among men who themselves lived and travelled north of 55. . Pike's next major outing, which he recounted in Through the Subarctic Forest, began in July 1892. With a Canadian and an Englishman, in an 18' spruce canoe painted light blue, Pike farewelled Fort Wrangel, Alaska, pushed up the Stikine River to Dease Lake in the Cassiar Mountains, ran down the Dease River to the Liard, and spent the winter near Lower Post. . In the spring of '93, having hauled his outfit some 320 km to Frances Lake, Y.T., he and the men he had now enticed into joining him, three HBC half-breeds from Manitoba, explored a new route across the height of land to a tributary of the Pelly. Paddling through unexplored country until they linked with G.M. Dawson's route of 1887, they then followed the Pelly to the Yukon and ran down it to Russian Mission. From there they portaged to the Kuskovim, which took them to the Bering Sea. "In rags and poverty," Pike and his crew then navigated 480 km of hazardous, weather-swept coastline to Nushugak, where they took out on 18 September. The canoe had been holed once on this journey of some 5600 km. .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cockburn, R.H.
author_facet Cockburn, R.H.
author_sort Cockburn, R.H.
title Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
title_short Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
title_full Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
title_fullStr Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
title_full_unstemmed Warburton Pike (1861-1915)
title_sort warburton pike (1861-1915)
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1985
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179
long_lat ENVELOPE(-108.501,-108.501,64.084,64.084)
ENVELOPE(-106.817,-106.817,65.333,65.333)
ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
ENVELOPE(-129.849,-129.849,59.288,59.288)
ENVELOPE(-129.987,-129.987,58.436,58.436)
ENVELOPE(-117.878,-117.878,67.252,67.252)
ENVELOPE(-113.691,-113.691,61.049,61.049)
ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500)
ENVELOPE(-110.501,-110.501,64.500,64.500)
ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850)
ENVELOPE(-145.100,-145.100,-76.467,-76.467)
ENVELOPE(-108.902,-108.902,62.802,62.802)
ENVELOPE(-128.482,-128.482,59.925,59.925)
ENVELOPE(168.517,168.517,-77.700,-77.700)
ENVELOPE(-104.568,-104.568,55.550,55.550)
ENVELOPE(-137.337,-137.337,62.783,62.783)
ENVELOPE(-122.103,-122.103,56.033,56.033)
ENVELOPE(-131.803,-131.803,56.699,56.699)
ENVELOPE(-131.839,-131.839,56.654,56.654)
geographic Aylmer Lake
Beechey Lake
Bering Sea
British Columbia
Canada
Cassiar
Dease Lake
Dease River
Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Lac de Gras
Liard
Lockhart
Lockhart River
Lower Post
Mackay
Mountain Portage
Nunavut
Pelly River
Rocky Mountain Portage
Stikine
Stikine River
Yukon
geographic_facet Aylmer Lake
Beechey Lake
Bering Sea
British Columbia
Canada
Cassiar
Dease Lake
Dease River
Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Lac de Gras
Liard
Lockhart
Lockhart River
Lower Post
Mackay
Mountain Portage
Nunavut
Pelly River
Rocky Mountain Portage
Stikine
Stikine River
Yukon
genre Arctic
Back River
Bering Sea
Dease Lake
eskimo*
Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
musk ox
Nunavut
Pelly River
Stikine River
Subarctic
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Arctic
Back River
Bering Sea
Dease Lake
eskimo*
Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
musk ox
Nunavut
Pelly River
Stikine River
Subarctic
Alaska
Yukon
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 38 No. 2 (1985): June: 89–166; 152-153
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179/49093
https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 38
container_issue 2
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/65179 2023-05-15T14:19:15+02:00 Warburton Pike (1861-1915) Cockburn, R.H. 1985-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179/49093 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/65179 ARCTIC; Vol. 38 No. 2 (1985): June: 89–166; 152-153 1923-1245 0004-0843 Biographies Canoeing Expeditions Explorers History Hunting Pike Warburton 1861-1915 Travels Starvation Aylmer Lake N.W.T Back River Nunavut Bering Sea Dease River N.W.T./Nunavut Fort Resolution region Pelly River Yukon Stikine River Alaska/British Columbia info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion other 1985 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:22:19Z . August 1889 found Pike embarking by canoe from Fort Resolution on what he called "an ordinary shooting expedition" north of Great Slave Lake, where he hoped to "penetrate this unknown land, to see the musk-ox, and find out as much as I could about their habits, and the habits of the Indians who go in pursuit of them every year." Thus commenced the 14 months of hard travel, privation, and adventure described so vividly in Pike's classic book The Barren Ground of Northern Canada. For five months he explored and hunted with Beaulieu clan - "the biggest scoundrels I ever had to travel with" - and Yellowknives as far as the Coppermine country north of Lac de Gras. The trip was replete with austere satisfactions of the sort valued by this hardbitten Englishman: brutal weather, near starvation, and the company of half-breeds and Indians whose improvidence and untrustworthiness he despised but whose skills and powers of endurance moved him to admiration; he also relished competing with these men. On this, as on every trip he took, he travelled light and lived off the land, for he held well-provided expeditions in contempt. Pike wintered - not at all passively - at Resolution; then, on 7 May, bound for Back's Great Fish River, he started north again. Only Back himself (1833-1835) and Anderson and Stewart (1855) had been there before him. He was accompanied on this stiff canoe journey by James Mackinlay, the HBC factor at Fort Resolution, Murdo Mackay, a Company servant, and a mixed crew of natives. . After reaching Aylmer Lake, they descended the Back River as far as Beechey Lake; finding no Eskimos there, and given Pike's plans to head "outside" to British Columbia, they turned south on 25 July, returning by way of the Lockhart River and Pike's Portage. They took out at Resolution on 24 August. Two impatient days later, Pike departed for Quesnel, B.C., some 2700 km away. Mackay went with him. Having ascended the Peace and crossed the Rocky Mountain Portage to Twelve-Foot Davis's trading post, they were waylaid by snow and advised to wait for freeze-up before going farther. . Fiercely driven by Pike, retreating desperately, frostbitten, starving, feeding on their moccasins, they struggled back down the Parsnip. On 27 December, near death, they "crawled up the steep bank" to Davis's cabin and salvation. The Barren Ground of Northern Canada, substantial, candid, compelling, was popular for many years among men who themselves lived and travelled north of 55. . Pike's next major outing, which he recounted in Through the Subarctic Forest, began in July 1892. With a Canadian and an Englishman, in an 18' spruce canoe painted light blue, Pike farewelled Fort Wrangel, Alaska, pushed up the Stikine River to Dease Lake in the Cassiar Mountains, ran down the Dease River to the Liard, and spent the winter near Lower Post. . In the spring of '93, having hauled his outfit some 320 km to Frances Lake, Y.T., he and the men he had now enticed into joining him, three HBC half-breeds from Manitoba, explored a new route across the height of land to a tributary of the Pelly. Paddling through unexplored country until they linked with G.M. Dawson's route of 1887, they then followed the Pelly to the Yukon and ran down it to Russian Mission. From there they portaged to the Kuskovim, which took them to the Bering Sea. "In rags and poverty," Pike and his crew then navigated 480 km of hazardous, weather-swept coastline to Nushugak, where they took out on 18 September. The canoe had been holed once on this journey of some 5600 km. . Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Back River Bering Sea Dease Lake eskimo* Fort Resolution Great Slave Lake musk ox Nunavut Pelly River Stikine River Subarctic Alaska Yukon University of Calgary Journal Hosting Aylmer Lake ENVELOPE(-108.501,-108.501,64.084,64.084) Beechey Lake ENVELOPE(-106.817,-106.817,65.333,65.333) Bering Sea British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada Cassiar ENVELOPE(-129.849,-129.849,59.288,59.288) Dease Lake ENVELOPE(-129.987,-129.987,58.436,58.436) Dease River ENVELOPE(-117.878,-117.878,67.252,67.252) Fort Resolution ENVELOPE(-113.691,-113.691,61.049,61.049) Great Slave Lake ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500) Lac de Gras ENVELOPE(-110.501,-110.501,64.500,64.500) Liard ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850) Lockhart ENVELOPE(-145.100,-145.100,-76.467,-76.467) Lockhart River ENVELOPE(-108.902,-108.902,62.802,62.802) Lower Post ENVELOPE(-128.482,-128.482,59.925,59.925) Mackay ENVELOPE(168.517,168.517,-77.700,-77.700) Mountain Portage ENVELOPE(-104.568,-104.568,55.550,55.550) Nunavut Pelly River ENVELOPE(-137.337,-137.337,62.783,62.783) Rocky Mountain Portage ENVELOPE(-122.103,-122.103,56.033,56.033) Stikine ENVELOPE(-131.803,-131.803,56.699,56.699) Stikine River ENVELOPE(-131.839,-131.839,56.654,56.654) Yukon ARCTIC 38 2