18 



maps we have to-day by the Canadian and U. S. Governments. 



Mr. Campbell was not only an intrepid explorer and inde- 

 fatigable traveller, but he was as well a man of deep, strong 

 religious convictions, and to show his sympathy for the Indians 

 of the Yukon Valley he in his will gave $1,000 to the mission 

 work out there, of which my brother, Archdeacon McDonald, 

 had charge for many years. 



Mr. Campbell established Fort Selkirk in 1848. This post 

 was pillaged by the Chilkat Indians in 1852, and was burned 

 down in 1853. Mr. Campbell, in the aiituinn of 1852, came up 

 to Fort Simpson, at the mouth of the Liard river, and in the 

 winter of 1852 and 1853 walked out on snowshoes to Fort Garry, 

 now Winnipeg, as mentioned in the paper. 



Note — Dr. Bryce wishes to acknowledge his indebteduess to Mr. C. C. 

 Chipmau, Commissioner of the Hudson's Bay Company at Winnipeg, for 

 the use of the views from which the illustrations of this paper are made. 



