Fort Espérance Explained

Fort Espérance
Location:Qu'Appelle River, Rocanville No. 151, Saskatchewan, Canada
Type:Fort
Built:CE.1787
Controlledby:North West Company

Fort Espérance was a North West Company trading post near Rocanville, Saskatchewan from CE.1787 until CE.1819. It was moved three times and was called Fort John from CE.1814 to CE.1816. There was a competing XY Company post from CE.1801 to CE.1805[1] and a Hudson's Bay post nearby from CE.1813 to CE.1816. It was on the Qu'Appelle River about 20 km from that river's junction with the Assiniboine River and about 7 km west of the Manitoba border. It was on the prairie in buffalo country and was mainly used as a source of pemmican which was sent down the river to Fort Bas de la Rivière at the mouth of the Winnipeg River.

The Fort Esperance National Historic Site located nearby (50.4939°N -101.5778°W) was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in CE.1944. The XY post was a mile down river on the south bank. The location of the Qu'Appelle lake site is unknown. One source suggests Round Lake 35 km west.

Timeline

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External links

50.4922°N -101.5775°W

Notes and References

  1. Arthur Morton,"A History of Western Canada",page 510 gives its name as Fort Qu'Appelle
  2. Parks Canada says 2 miles west, Losey says one half mile west