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- Henry_John_Moberly abstract "Henry John Moberly, also known as Harry or Harvey (1835–1931) was a fur trader. He entered the Hudson's Bay Company's service in 1854, and in 1862 was in charge of the post on Stuart Lake; gave his name to Moberly Lake in the Peace River country. After nearly 40 years service, retired in Saskatchewan, in 1894.Moberly was born at Penetanguishene, Ontario, on 2 August 1835. His father was Post-Captain John Moberly, R.N., and his mother Marie Foch, a Polish lady whose ancestral home was in Alsace-Lorraine. Henry John was a younger son. Several of the Moberlys have given distinguished service in the fields of engineering and exploration of Canada.Moberly was educated at the Barrie Grammar School and Upper Canada College. Study, however, to one of his restless and adventurous temperament, became irksome, and at the age of sixteen, his father having secured for him a position with the internationally-known English insurance house of Lloyd’s, he left school and was sent to the St. Petersburg agency of the firm. Once the novelty of a strange environment wore off, life in Russia palled on the boy and his roving nature again asserting itself, after two years he quit his employment and returned to Canada in 1853.Soon afterwards Moberly met a member of the party sent by the overland route via the Mackenzie to the Arctic in search of Sir John Franklin. His account of the Saskatchewan country, the immense herds of buffalo, the droves of deer, freedom from restrictive laws, Indians on the warpath and dearth of police, fired Moberly’s youthful soul. Without hesitation Moberly wrote to Sir George Simpson then Governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company, requesting to be sent to the Saskatchewan, in the service of the ancient organization.Sometime in January 1854, Moberly received a reply from Sir George, with a five-year contract and instructions to meet the canoes at Sault Ste. Marie, from which point he was to travel with Sir George to his destination.Departure from his home after the opening of Navigation on Lake Huron would have allowed plenty of time to reach the Sault, however, the desire of making a start toward the promised land was too strong for his patience and he left the East during the next month.In February, 1854, Henry Moberly, a youth of eighteen, stood one day on the street of his native village, bargaining earnestly with some First Nations people. At that time, the Government employed Indians to carry the mail on sleds from Penetanguishene to the Sault. They were required to haul one hundred and eighty pounds on each sled, besides their food, cooking outfit and blankets, using no dogs but doing the work themselves.For five dollars the two carriers agreed to take Moberly and his outfit, as far as Fort la Cloche, a Hudson’s Bay Company post situated on the north-shore mainland of Lake Huron, opposite Manitoulin Island. He landed at Manitou Island where he remained a few days with the Indian Agent, Captain Ironside. Moberly then crossed to the mainland at the mouth of the La Cloche River where he made his first acquaintance with a Hudson’s Bay Company trading post and the first Hudson’s Bay Company officer he had ever seen.Waiting a few months at Fort La Cloche for the canoes, they came as customary up the Ottawa, thence down the French River to its mouth in Lake Huron and via Manitoulin Island to Fort La Cloche. They brought a letter from Sir George, who was coming by rail through Chicago, instructing Moberly to meet him at Sault Ste. Marie. After the men had rested for a few hours they embarked. The canoes were in charge of Robert Campbell, a commissioned officer who had spent many years at the Hudson’s Bay Company’s posts on the Yukon, the lower Mackenzie, Dease Lake and Peel River. Moberly found him to be a most agreeable companion who gave him much information about the north.For almost 40 years following this, Henry John Moberly worked for the Hudson's Bay Company, at various locations in the Canadian North-West, retiring from active service in the spring of 1894. From Red River carts, horses, draught oxen, dog trains, York Boats, canoes and pack mules, Moberly witnessed the change to the conveniences of modern civilization, wagon roads, railroads, steamboats, telegraphs, telephones and electric lights.".
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- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageRevisionID "707956461".
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Alsace-Lorraine.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink American_bison.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Arctic.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Barrie.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Category:1835_births.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Category:1931_deaths.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Category:Canadian_explorers.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hudsons_Bay_Company_people.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Penetanguishene.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Deer.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink First_Nations.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Fur_trade.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink George_Simpson_(HBC_administrator).
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Hudsons_Bay_Company.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink John_Franklin.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink John_Moberly_(Royal_Navy_officer).
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Huron.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Mackenzie_River.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Manitoulin_Island.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Moberly_Lake_(British_Columbia).
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Ontario.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Peace_River.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Penetanguishene.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Poland.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Post-captain.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Campbell_(fur_trader).
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Navy.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Russia.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Saint_Petersburg.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Saskatchewan.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Sault_Ste._Marie,_Ontario.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Stuart_Lake.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLink Upper_Canada_College.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLinkText "Henry John Moberly".
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageWikiLinkText "Henry".
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Henry_John_Moberly wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Henry_John_Moberly subject Category:1835_births.
- Henry_John_Moberly subject Category:1931_deaths.
- Henry_John_Moberly subject Category:Canadian_explorers.
- Henry_John_Moberly subject Category:Hudsons_Bay_Company_people.
- Henry_John_Moberly subject Category:People_from_Penetanguishene.
- Henry_John_Moberly hypernym Trader.
- Henry_John_Moberly type Person.
- Henry_John_Moberly type Trader.
- Henry_John_Moberly type Thing.
- Henry_John_Moberly comment "Henry John Moberly, also known as Harry or Harvey (1835–1931) was a fur trader. He entered the Hudson's Bay Company's service in 1854, and in 1862 was in charge of the post on Stuart Lake; gave his name to Moberly Lake in the Peace River country. After nearly 40 years service, retired in Saskatchewan, in 1894.Moberly was born at Penetanguishene, Ontario, on 2 August 1835.".
- Henry_John_Moberly label "Henry John Moberly".
- Henry_John_Moberly sameAs Q5723988.
- Henry_John_Moberly sameAs m.0dsvrx.
- Henry_John_Moberly sameAs Q5723988.
- Henry_John_Moberly wasDerivedFrom Henry_John_Moberly?oldid=707956461.
- Henry_John_Moberly isPrimaryTopicOf Henry_John_Moberly.