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James Knight



 
 
James Knight was a director of the Hudson's Bay Company and an explorer who died in an expedition to the Northwest Passage.

Knight was born in England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 and joined the Hudson's Bay Company in 1676 as a carpenter
Carpenter

A carpenter is a skilled artisan who performs carpentry - a wide range of woodworking that includes constructing building construction, furniture, and other objects out of wood....
. In 1682, he became Chief Factor of the trading post of Fort Albany
Fort Albany, Ontario

Fort Albany First Nation is a community in Northern Ontario, Canada, situated on the southern shore of the Albany River and partly on Sinclair Island....
 in James Bay
James Bay

James Bay is a large body of water on the southern end of Hudson Bay in Canada. Both bodies of water extend from the Arctic Ocean. James Bay borders the provinces of Quebec and Ontario; islands within the bay are part of Nunavut....
 where he made himself rich. In 1697, he bought stock in HBC and, in 1711, he gained a seat on the board of directors.

The long wars of the Grand Alliance
War of the Grand Alliance

The Nine Years' War ? often called the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg ? was a major war of the late 17th century fought primarily on mainland Europe but also encompassing theatres in Ireland and North America....
 and the Spanish Succession
War of the Spanish Succession

War of the Spanish Succession was a war fought in 1701-1714, in which several European powers combined to stop a possible unification of the Kingdoms of Spain and France under a single Bourbon monarch, upsetting the European Balance of power in international relations....
 with France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 had spread to Canada and battered the HBC.






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James Knight was a director of the Hudson's Bay Company and an explorer who died in an expedition to the Northwest Passage.

Knight was born in England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 and joined the Hudson's Bay Company in 1676 as a carpenter
Carpenter

A carpenter is a skilled artisan who performs carpentry - a wide range of woodworking that includes constructing building construction, furniture, and other objects out of wood....
. In 1682, he became Chief Factor of the trading post of Fort Albany
Fort Albany, Ontario

Fort Albany First Nation is a community in Northern Ontario, Canada, situated on the southern shore of the Albany River and partly on Sinclair Island....
 in James Bay
James Bay

James Bay is a large body of water on the southern end of Hudson Bay in Canada. Both bodies of water extend from the Arctic Ocean. James Bay borders the provinces of Quebec and Ontario; islands within the bay are part of Nunavut....
 where he made himself rich. In 1697, he bought stock in HBC and, in 1711, he gained a seat on the board of directors.

The long wars of the Grand Alliance
War of the Grand Alliance

The Nine Years' War ? often called the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg ? was a major war of the late 17th century fought primarily on mainland Europe but also encompassing theatres in Ireland and North America....
 and the Spanish Succession
War of the Spanish Succession

War of the Spanish Succession was a war fought in 1701-1714, in which several European powers combined to stop a possible unification of the Kingdoms of Spain and France under a single Bourbon monarch, upsetting the European Balance of power in international relations....
 with France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 had spread to Canada and battered the HBC. Four of the company's five trading posts were lost to the French. However, among the provisions of the Treaty of Utrecht
Treaty of Utrecht

The Treaty of Utrecht that established the Peace of Utrecht, rather than a single document, comprises a series of individual peace treaty signed in the Dutch Republic city of Utrecht in March and April 1713....
 in 1713 was the restoration of these posts. In 1714, Knight was sent out to take possession of York Fort and restore the company's fortunes. Despite the damage to the fort from the French occupation, and the hardships of the climate, he succeeded in rebuilding the company's business, and, in 1719, it paid its first dividend for 20 years.

Knight was determined to explore the country to the north and west of Hudson Bay
Hudson Bay

Hudson Bay is a large , relatively shallow body of water in northeastern Canada. It is approximately 850 miles long and 650 miles wide. It drains a very large area that includes parts of Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Alberta, most of Manitoba, parts of North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Montana, and the southeastern area of Nunavut...
, hoping to find mineral resources and perhaps the Northwest Passage
Northwest Passage

The Northwest Passage is a sea route through the Arctic Ocean, along the northern coast of North America via waterways amidst the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, connecting the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. In 1715, he organized a mission to promote peace between the local Cree
Cree

Cree is one of the largest group of indigenous peoples in North America, located mainly across Canada and historically in the United States from Minnesota westward but are found today in Montana....
 and the Chipewyan
Chipewyan

The Chipewyan are a Dene Aboriginal people in Canada, whose ancestors were the Taltheilei Shale Tradition. There are approximately 11,000 Chipewyan living in the Canadian Arctic regions around Hudson Bay, including Manitoba and the Northwest Territories, as well as northern parts of Alberta and Saskatchewan....
s who lived further north. The mission was accompanied by Thanadelthur, a Chipewyan woman who had been captured by Cree and escaped to York Fort. With Thanadelthur acting as interpreter, the mission travelled more than 1,000 km northwest, returning to York Fort in 1716 with ten Chipewyans. They carried copper knives, but Knight convinced himself that their stories of a river where lumps of "yellow mettle" could be found — perhaps Coppermine River
Coppermine River

The Coppermine River is a river in the North Slave Region and Kitikmeot Region, Nunavut regions of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut in Canada....
 — indicated the presence of gold. And their stories of a sea to the west — probably the Great Slave Lake
Great Slave Lake

Great Slave Lake is the second-largest lake in the Northwest Territories of Canada , the deepest lake in North America at 614 m , and the List of world's largest lakes lake in the world....
 — he interpreted as a bay leading to the Pacific.

In 1717, Knight established a new trading post
Trading post

A trading post is a place where the Trade of product takes place. The preferred travel route to a trading post, or between trading posts, is known as a trade route....
 at the mouth of the Churchill River
Churchill River (Hudson Bay)

The Churchill River is a major river in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Canada. From the head of the Churchill Lake it is 1,609 km long. It was named after John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough and governor of the Hudson's Bay Company from 1685 to 1691....
, but another mission north from there experienced only terrible hardship in the winter of 1717–1718 and made no discoveries. Knight returned to Britain in 1718 and persuaded the company governor, Sir Bibye Lake, to fund an expedition on two vessels, the ship Albany of 100 tons, and the sloop
Sloop

A sloop is a sailboat with a fore-and-aft rig and a single mast farther forward than the mast of a cutter . A sloop's fore-triangle is smaller than a cutter's, and a sloop usually bends only one headsail, though this distinction is not definitive....
 Discovery of 40 tons. Knight sailed on 5 June 1719 with two other company ships: Albany Frigate (Capt. George Barlow) and the sloop Discovery (Capt. David Vaughan). They parted in Hudson Bay in July, and never returned.

Their fate was uncertain for many years. We now know that the two ships reached Marble Island in the northwest of Hudson Bay and anchored in a sheltered inlet at the east of the island. The expedition landed their supplies, built buildings of stone and brick, and spent the winter ashore. However, for some reasonm they were unable to sail again in the spring, for the wrecks of both ships lie at the bottom of the bay where they were found by divers in 1991–1992. It is possible that they were damaged in passing the shallow bar, or that they were crushed by ice during the winter.

In 1767, a whaling expedition discovered the 1719 camp and found many graves, and in 1769 another whaler reported being told by an elderly Inuk
Inuit

Inuit is a general term for a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic regions of Canada, Greenland, Russia and Alaska, United States....
 of Marble Island that the expedition had starved to death over two winters in 1719–1721. However, a series of archaeological investigations carried out from 1989-92 by University of Alberta researchers led by Owen Beattie and John Geiger have cast doubt on this version of events as only one human vertebra and three teeth were found around the buildings. The graves elsewhere on Marble Island are Inuit, not European. The plentiful remains of local wildlife — caribou, seals, geese — suggest that the explorers did not starve, or at least not in the first winter. But piles of coal suggest that they didn't spend a second winter. It seems much more likely that the expedition attempted to escape, either by crossing the 30 km strait to the mainland while frozen, or else by setting sail in the ships' boats in the spring or summer of 1720.

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