William Bevan (sloopmaster)
William Bevan (fl. 1723–37) was an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company and came to the Fort Albany on James Bay in 1723 from England as mate of the Beaver sloop. He became Chief Factor there four years later, putting him in charge of the whole Albany District of the Hudson's Bay Company, succeeding George Gunn.[1]
Bevan and a party explored the Moose River area and the site of the older Moose Fort trading post which Pierre de Troyes had captured from the HBC in 1686, which the English had burned to the ground in 1696.[2] A new Moose Fort was built in 1730 and Bevan became "Chief Factor and Commander there in 1732. A careless kitchen fire caused the fort to burn to the ground on December 26, 1735, resulting in the death of an Indigenous girl in the fire, and the death of three HBC men afterwards from exposure and hunger. Despite his contract with the HBC being renewed in 1736, Beven was recalled to England in 1737, once news of the fire reached London. He was succeeded as Chief Factor of Moose District by Richard Staunton.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b "Biography – BEVAN, WILLIAM – Volume II (1701-1740) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography".
- ^ Moose Factory – An Exploration of Frontier History, Ontario Heritage Foundation, 2002, 07-02-12M-9002-2002
External links[]
- Explorers of Canada
- Hudson's Bay Company people
- 18th-century Canadian people
- Canadian people stubs
- Explorer stubs