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The Savage River: Seventy-one Days with Simon Fraser

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""We had to pass where no human being should venture.""

On the morning of May 28, 1808, Simon Fraser, two clerks, two Native guides, and nineteen voyageurs set out in four frail birch-bark canoes from Fort George on the Pacific slope of the Rocky Mountains. Before them was an unnamed and unexplored river that led south and, Fraser hoped, west to the Pacific coast. Every bend threatened new dangers - impassable rapids, treacherous portages, unfriendly Natives. But in seventy-one days, Fraser and his party fought their way to the mouth of the savage river and back to Fort George. Fraser's journey on the river named for him is one of the most remarkable feats in the exploration of western Canada. Although Fraser failed to find the navigable canoe route to the Pacific, so desperately needed by the North West Company, his exploration helped to secure for Great Britain - and for Canada - the vast territory that became British Columbia.

"The Savage River" is a gripping account by award-winning author Marjorie Wilkins Campbell of one of the greatest adventures in Canadian history. First published in 1968, the book is base on Simon Fraser's journal of his remarkable hourney on the river that bears his name.

149 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 2003

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Marjorie Wilkins Campbell

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303 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2025
I read this aloud to Ivy. It was somewhat interesting but I felt that they justified some of the men's treatment of the natives
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