Lazy Bear Lodge, Churchill Built in 1995 by its owners and founders, the Lazy Bear Lodge was constructed over ten years using recyclable materials, including logs damaged during a wild - fire and windows from a 19th century Hudson
Bay Trading Post.
These are the only outfit photos I got while I was away, and they were taken at the Hudson
Bay Trading Post replica.
Not exact matches
Edward Beauclerk Maurice, who was born in 1913, traveled to the Arctic at the age of sixteen, where he worked at a number of
trading posts on behalf of the Hudson's
Bay Company.
Incorporated by Charles II in 1670 as the «Gentlemen Adventurers
trading into Hudson's
Bay» and led by Prince Rupert, they had been inspired by the thought of getting into Hudson's
Bay and establishing
trading posts ahead of the French.
The Hudson's
Bay Company had
trading posts in the Edmonton area in the late 1700s.
Wanting to establish their presence, the French Hudson's
Bay Company began opening
trading posts such as Great Whale River in 1820.
This settlement is believed to be the location of Fort McLoughlin, an important
post during the Maritime Fur
Trade for the Hudson's
Bay Company in the late eighteenth Century.
There are shops located in all of the four residential
bays including supermarkets, newsagents, boutiques, hardware stores, vehicle hire, bakery, chemist, photo shop, hairdressing salons, and liquor stores, along with the local credit union,
post office, real estate agencies, service stations and
trades related businesses.