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John Work of the Hudson's Bay Company - Leader of the California Brigade of 1832-33 (June 1943) (16 pages)

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Page: of 16

John Work of the Hudson’s Bay Company 99
sized in the Columbia River as he neared Fort Vancouver. His records were
lost.
John Work was sober, industrious, reliable, faithful to his employers,
loyal to his friends and devoted to his Indian wife and their family of eleven
children. These are not spectacular traits with which to enliven a biographical sketch, nevertheless they must be assumed to form a background for the
dramatic incidents of exploration, fur-hunting, and Indian fighting in which
he participated, and for his life at distant Fort Simpson. These same traits
graced the serenity of his declining years in the picturesque settlement which
grew up at Fort Victoria on Vancouver Island.
John Work brought to the Pacific Northwest standards of conduct from
which he did not deviate. He chose as a mate a half-breed Indian girl, whose
father was a wandering French Canadian trapper, and treated her with much
consideration and affection. This consort accompanied John Work on his
long and dangerous journeys, and his life was so closely linked with hers that
his story without hers would be incomplete. Just as the background of his
character must be assumed to color his every action, so must the presence of
the wife be taken for granted in the thick of every episode, even those punctuated by the flight of arrows and the flash of firing muskets.
John Work was born in 1792 near Londonderry, Ireland, where the family had resided for three hundred years. His correct name was WARK, not
WORK. Upon his enlistment in the ranks of employees of the Hudson’s Bay
Company his name was entered on their books as “JOHN WORK,” and this
spelling he adopted henceforth. His Irish friends and relatives were very indignant that the time-honored name of WARK had been anglicized. A tradition that the change was due to an error in the Office of Land and Works is
discounted by family members. John Work’s associates adapted themselves
readily to the new spelling, as is attested by their letters, but the pronunciation was another matter, and descendants still refer to their progenitor as
“Wark.” ?°
In letters now on file in the Archives of British Columia John Work makes
occasional reference to a much younger brother who also had emigrated to
Canada. This brother has been identified as the late Senator David Wark
who celebrated his one hundredth birthday in 1905. A nephew, John Wark
or Work, joined his uncle in Victoria in 1850 and remained as his amanuensis
until 1861.1
At the time of the coalition of the North West Company and the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1821, John Work was at Red River. On July 18, 1823,
he started for the Columbia District.!? In the party was Peter Skene Ogden,
already a veteran of the Pacific Northwest fur trade. Ogden was returning
from London where he had gone to reinstate himself with the Hudson’s Bay
Company after service with the Nor’westers. There is no evidence that any
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