b. 1797(?)
d. 1850-04(?)
Thomas McKay was born in
1797 in Sault, Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada to Alexander McKay and Marguerite Wadin, a
Métis woman. McKay's primary recognition lies in his construction and ownership of
Fort Boise, near the
Snake River, in
1834. Due to his father's connection and entrance in the Northwest Company around
1791, Mckay too joined in the business and at the age of 14 became a clerk to the HMS
Tonquin. McKay arrived in the Columbia Region with his father in
1811; although his father perished soon thereafter in an attack on the coast of
Vancouver Island. After the death of his father, McKay continued to work for the Northwest company,
even fighting on the side of the Northwest Company and the Métis against the
Hudson's Bay Company in
1815.
Later, McKay would be transferred to
HBC where he would continue his work as a clerk. Beyond being a clerk, McKay was described
as a successful
Indian trader, hunter, and guide,
often he was at
Fort Vancouver in which he would join fur brigade expeditions. And, from
1826 to 1828, McKay took part in the Snake Country Brigades under
Ogden. By
1832, it seems that McKay retired from the
HBC, but even after his
retirement
he continued to work on and off for the company for many years after. In
1834, for example, McKay was encouraged by his step-father
Dr. John McLoughlin to build Fort Boise as a challenge to the American
Fort Hall.
McKay kept ownership of Fort Boise until the late
1840s when he was chosen as the captain to lead the militia in the Cayuse War in the aftermath
of the Whitman Massacre. After his involvement in the war, Peter Burnett selected McKay to lead the first
wagon trains from Oregon to the
California gold fields which proved to be a difficult task; not only due to the passageway but
as a child McKay suffered a hip dislocation which permanently
lamed him,
his injury remained with him until his death. It is unclear what McKay did after this or when his specific date of death is, it
has been said he died somewhere between
November 1849 and
April 1850 of unknown causes.
- 1. Zachary A. Sanchez, Fort Boise's Historic Transtion, Intermountain Histories.
- 2. Annie Laurie Bird, Thomas McKay, Oregon Historical Quarterly, vol.40, no.1, 1939, 2.
- 3. Sarah Olsen and Linda Kracke, Descendents of Alexander McKay, Museum BMI.
- 4. Bird, Thomas McKay, 4.
- 5. A Bit About the Children, History Genealogy: Dr. John McLoughlin ; 1811: Thomas McKay, Oregon Pioneers.
- 6. Sanchez, Fort Boise's Historic Transition.
- 7. A Bit About the Children, History Genealogy.
- 8. Bird, Thomas McKay, 3-4.
- 9. Ibid., 14.