
George Simpson (Manitoba Museum)
'Sir George Simpson' (
1787 –
7 September 1860) was a
Scots-Quebecer and employee of the
Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). His title was Governor-in-Chief of
Rupert's Land and the Indian Territories in
British North America (now
Canada) from
1821 to 1860.
George Simpson was born in
Dingwall,
Ross-shire,
Scotland, the only son of George Simpson, Sr., a writer in Dingwall. He was raised by his father, assisted by Sir George's grandmother Isobel Mackenzie and her two daughters Jean and Mary, in
Dingwall in
Ross-shire. He was most likely born in early 1792, as he was a schoolfellow of his "relative," Aemilius Simpson, also born in 1792.
At age sixteen, in 1808, he went to
London and was trained in
business at his uncle Geddes Mackenzie Simpson's
sugar company,
Graham and Simpson. His skills interested partner
Andrew Colville (also known as Andrew Wedderburn Colvile), who was also a high ranking HBC
executive. Colvile encouraged Simpson to join the London office of the HBC, and by
1821, Simpson became the
Governor of the Northern Department of the Hudson's Bay Company. Simpson oversaw the merging of the HBC and the
North West Company in
1821, and sought to streamline the company by closing competing
fur trade posts. Not willing to remain in London to oversee operations, he maintained homes during his tenure in
Montreal and the
Red River Settlement. He was an avid traveler and visited fur trade posts across
North America. A stern taskmaster, he pushed his traveling crewmen to extremes in order to travel as quickly as possible from post to post.
In recognition of his tireless work with the HBC, Simpson was
knighted by
Queen Victoria in
1841. The Simpson River in British Columbia and Simpson Pass in the
Sunshine Village area where named in his honour as he was one of the first Europeans to travel through the region on his journey to the Pacific in 1841.
Simpson married Geddes Mackenzie Simpson's daughter. Frances Ramsay Simpson, in
1830, by whom he had five children: George Geddes 1832, Frances Webster 1833, Augusta D'Este 1841; Margaret Mackenzie 1843, and John Henry Pelly 1850. By other unions he had seven more children: Maria Louisa 1815, Isabella 1817, Maria 1822, James Keith 1823, George Stewart 1827, and John Mackenzie 1829. Descendants of these children have distinguished themselves in Canada in the fields of the fur trade, agriculture, medicine, politics, and the military.
Simpson died in Montreal in 1860 and is buried at
Mount Royal Cemetery.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
Hudson's Bay Company Biography