norman_morisonNorman Morison, 1849-1853
norman_morisonNorman Morison was a 529-tonne Hudson’s Bay Company ship.1 It arrived on the west coast in 1850, bringing supplies for both the Russian American
Company and the Hudson’s Bay Company, as well as labourers and their families.2 It made the trip from England to Victoria two more times between 1850-53.3
According to this document, in 1850, three British seamen deserted from the Hudson’s
Bay Company and left norman_morisonNorman Morison while it was anchored in Victoria. They fled to Fort Rupert and were eventually caught
and murdered by natives of the northern part of Vancouver's Island
who had mistakenly been told by George Blenkinsop that there would be a reward for
the white mens[sic] heads.
- 1. Judith Hudson Beattie and Helen M. Buss, eds., Undelivered Letters to Hudson's Bay Company Men on the Northwest Coast of America,
1830-57 (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2003), 413.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Ibid.
Mentions of this vessel in the documents
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The Colonial Despatches: Fish, Charles
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Parker, John to Peel, Sir Frederick 28 November 1851, CO 305:3, no. 10075, 215.
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Pelly, Sir John Henry to Grey, Right Honorable, Second Baronet, Sir George 11 February
1851, CO 305:3, no. 1322, 360.
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Boys, Reverend Thomas to Cuffe, 3rd Earl of Desart John Otway O'Conner 11 October
1852, CO 305:3, no. 9263, 495.