Page 100 - Fortier Family History
P. 100
Finlayson had travelled to Scotland in 1837. He dined at the Simpson family home in London almost daily from February to May and the entry in his journal for 25 May, “Heard first intimation from a certain quarter,” might have been anticipated. Isobel Graham Simpson, George Simpson’s sister-in-law, married Duncan Finlayson in Bromley-by-Bow, Middlesex, on 10 Nov. 1838, in the presence of Simpson and McLoughlin. The marriage settlement provided income and dividends from a portfolio of investments, and perhaps a dowry from the Simpson family. Finlayson became the governor of Assiniboia in the spring of 1839. Joined by his wife a year later, he supervised the Red River community, oversaw HBC interests, and contributed to the stability and grace of local society throughout his five years at Upper Fort Garry. During his tenure the judicial system of the colony was reorganized by the newly appointed recorder, Adam Thom. At the same time agriculturalists were encouraged to develop methods and products appropriate to the environment. Finlayson recruited settlers for the proposed HBC colony in Puget Sound and, in 1841, he sent 23 families to the Pacific under James Sinclair in a vain attempt to stave off American penetration of the disputed territory. He faced continual problems related to “freedom of trade” but carefully avoided open confrontation. Challenges from merchants James Sinclair and Andrew McDermot, and from Pembina trader Norman Wolfred Kittson, had only begun when Finlayson left Red River \[see Alexander Christie\]. His term was considered a success; Alexander Ross concluded that he had “laid a solid basis, not only for the prosperity of the white man, but also for the Christian civilization of its aboriginal inhabitants.” In 1844 Finlayson and his wife moved to Lachine, Canada East, where he was to supervise the Montreal Department and assist George Simpson. They soon found that they were to live with, and help, the Simpson family. A small, ill-contrived house, Finlayson’s continuing ill health, and, no doubt, the governor’s temper, encouraged them to spend at least three winters in England during the next decade. In addition to the daily administration of the department, Finlayson travelled to Washington in 1848 with Simpson and Henry Hulse Berens for negotiations on company land claims, and assisted when in England with the publication of two books on Red River and the fur trade by Alexander Ross. He retired from service on 1 June 1855 but, at his own request and with the strong support of Simpson, he was reappointed to the Lachine post six months later. When he retired in 1859 and took up permanent residence in London, he was elected to the committee of the company. A dominant feature of Finlayson’s personality was his firm adherence to a high standard of personal conduct. Combined with moral uprightness was a sincere concern for the native peoples within the fur trade empire. In his record of the 1831 trip to the Columbia, Finlayson had condemned the treatment of the natives by his “licentious” Canadian crew. In Columbia and Red River he supported the missionary enterprises as best he could. His principal heir, after the death of his wife, was the Church Missionary Society of England, which, according to Finlayson’s wishes, was to establish additional missionary stations in HBC lands for the conversion of natives to Christianity. Finlayson* rose from apprentice clerk to director of his company and acquired many luxuries. His postings in later years were doubtless affected by the influence he acquired by marriage but were also due to his own abilities. His influence upon the administration of the company was undoubtedly dependent upon the will of the governor but no one was closer to Simpson after 1840. In Finlayson, ability was linked with fortune. By Gerald Friesen *There is more information on Duncan’s career with the Hudson’s Bay Company in the “Finlayson Hudson’s Bay Company” section. Upper Fort Garry, 1870 (Now Winnipeg) Sir George Simpson - Gov of the HBC 1786-1860