At its height in the nineteenth century, the Hudson's Bay
Company's trading territory covered three million square miles and
spanned the continent. And no one person was more responsible for
its success than its larger-than-life governor, the remarkable
George Simpson. The illegitimate son of a ne'er-do-well Scottish
lawyer, Simpson was a master planner who laid the foundations for
the greatest business enterprise of its day, a pompous dandy who
was most at home in a canoe, and a man who, while ashamed of his
out-of-wedlock birth, sired at least thirteen children with eight
different women.
A wide cast of characters strides through the pages of this
gripping story--frontier entrepreneurs, hardy voyageurs, skilled
native trappers, intrepid explorers, impoverished settlers, and
lords and ladies of the realm--and George Simpson was at home with
all of them. The history of the Bay is that of a country in the
making, but it is also a history of the clash between different
ways of life in a vast, sparsely populated land far from the
crowded cities, counting-houses and imperial ambitions of the
British Empire.
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