[Americana] Mackenzie, Alexander. Voyages from Montreal on the River St. Laurence, Through the Continent of North America, to the Frozen and Pacific Oceans; In the Years 1789 and 1793...
London: Printed for T. Cadell, Jun. and W. Davies; Cobbett and Morgan; and W. Creech, 1801. First edition. 4to. (ii), viii, cxxxii, 412, (2) pp.; without half-title. Illustrated with a frontispiece portrait of Mackenzie by T. Condie after T. Lawrence, and three large folding engraved maps (one with hand-colored outlining). Full contemporary calf, rebacked with original spine laid down, extremities worn, spine dry; marbled edges; gift inscription on front free endpaper, dated 1924; offsetting and toning to title-page, ink and pencil library numbers on verso of same; library number in pencil on p. (ii); closed tear at gutter of first map, separation along fold of second map, offsetting on same; spotting to text. Graff 2630; Hill, p.187; Howes M-133; Pilling 2384; Sabin 43414; Streeter Sale 3653; Wagner-Camp 1:1
First edition of this cornerstone of any collection of books on the exploration of North America.
Alexander Mackenzie was "the first white man to cross the continent, and his journal...is of surpassing interest" (Wagner-Camp). The present work is the first published account of the two exploring expeditions that Mackenzie made on behalf of the North West Company as part of their attempt to break the Hudson Bay Company's stranglehold on the fur trade. The author was born in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland in 1764, was in North America in 1774, was employed as a clerk in the fur trade in 1779, and by 1787 he was a wintering partner in the North West Company posted to Fort Chipewyan on Lake Athabasca.
Mackenzie set out on his first expedition on June 3, 1789, armed with information and maps provided by the fur trader Peter Pond. He had decided to follow a large river flowing west from Great Slave Lake in search of a Northwest Passage to the Pacific. The expedition was partially successful: on July 13, Mackenzie and his party reached salt water, but it proved to be the Beaufort Sea rather than the Pacific. After a further two years in the fur trade in Canada, Mackenzie returned to England in the autumn of 1791 in order to study navigation and astronomy--the first expedition had demonstrated to him that he needed more expertise in these areas. He returned to Canada in the spring of 1792 and made his way west to the newly-built Fort Fork, near the junction of the Peace and Smoky Rivers.
In May 1793, having spent the winter preparing, Mackenzie left on what was to be his greatest journey. After a difficult passage by canoe and on foot through the Rockies, Mackenzie and his party arrived at the Pacific near Bella Coola, British Columbia on July 22, 1793. He returned to Grand Portage in 1794 and subsequently to Montreal where he acted as an agent for the North West Company until 1799, when he retired to England. His great achievement did not receive the wide acknowledgment it deserved until the present work was published, and his subsequent and equally important proposals drawing attention to the importance of the Pacific coast: in 1802 Mackenzie was knighted by George III, and he went on to serve as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada from 1804 to 1808.
This lot is located in Philadelphia.