Unsettled: Lord Selkirk's Scottish Colonists and the Battle for Canada's West, 1813-1816

Unsettled: Lord Selkirk's Scottish Colonists and the Battle for Canada's West, 1813-1816

by Robert Lower

Narrated by Jonathan Yen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 34 minutes

Unsettled: Lord Selkirk's Scottish Colonists and the Battle for Canada's West, 1813-1816

Unsettled: Lord Selkirk's Scottish Colonists and the Battle for Canada's West, 1813-1816

by Robert Lower

Narrated by Jonathan Yen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 34 minutes

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Overview

The fascinating story of the Red River Settlement, now Winnipeg, in the years 1813 to 1816, told with archival journals, reports, and letters



Unsettled tells the story of two hundred Highlanders who flee the Scottish Clearances in 1813 to establish a settlement on the Red River in what eventually became Winnipeg. They are sponsored by the Earl of Selkirk, a man who has never been west of Montreal. Families who have never left their Highland crofts take an epic journey over ocean, up wild rivers, and through boundless wilderness, surviving disease and brutal winter only to face the determined opposition of fur barons who want no sodbusters threatening their trade and are prepared to stop at nothing to destroy their dream.



The "empty" land they've been promised is also anything but, already occupied by First Nations bands and the beginnings of that proud nation soon to be called Métis, whom they must befriend or fight.



Unsettled takes you inside the experience, relying on journals, reports, and letters to bring these days of soaring hope, crushing despair, and heroic determination to life-to bring their present into ours.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Drawing on the rich documentary record and his decades-long career in filmmaking, Lower tells the tragic story of the beginnings of the Red River Settlement (Winnipeg) and how bitter fur trade rivalries, short-sighted leadership, and mistrust and misunderstanding left an ‘unsettled’ legacy that continues to inform Indigenous/non-Indigenous relations to this day.” — Bill Waiser, winner of the Governor General’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction

“Witty, thorough, and thoughtful, this informal history explains the political machinations and misinformation that led to Seven Oaks.” — Library Journal

“Bob Lower has given us an unvarnished account of three years of real-life experienced by hapless, flawed, ordinary and extraordinary Scottish settlers. His prose is lively, his story moves quickly and his use of first-hand accounts makes for compelling and utterly believable drama. The tale ends with tragic deaths at Seven Oaks, the dramatic details of which are recorded here with clarity and wisdom. I enjoyed this book very much, and I recommend it wholeheartedly.” — Gerald Friesen, professor of history (retired), St. John’s College, University of Manitoba

“Lower immerses you in his powerful descriptions of life during those years. His vivid imagery is enough to place you within the shoes of the settlers and it invites us to truly grasp the struggle against the elements that these survivors face. The author breathes life into these historical events rather than simply reciting them through factual accounts.” — White Wall Review

Library Journal

05/01/2023

To venture across the Atlantic Ocean in the early 1800s in search of a new life must have demanded extraordinary courage. Many Scottish people, having been displaced by the Highland Clearances, responded to the Earl of Selkirk's offer of a new life in Canada, on land that is now situated in Winnipeg, Manitoba. In honor of their patron, they were called the Selkirk Settlers. One settler was Sam Lamont, a millwright and the author's great-great grandfather. Filmmaker Lower's detailed analysis focuses on principal characters, the brutal weather conditions, stifling class distinctions, and the colonizers' assumption that the land, which belonged to the Métis people, was there for the taking. The settlers found themselves unwitting participants in the struggle between the Hudson's Bay Company and the Northwest Company to control the lucrative fur trade. The clash between the fur traders, who resented the permanent settlements, and the settlers who wanted to bring agriculture to the area, culminated in the Seven Oaks massacre in June 1816, in which 22 people died. Includes a time line and list of characters. VERDICT Witty, thorough, and thoughtful, this informal history explains the political machinations and misinformation that led to Seven Oaks.—Penelope J.M. Klein

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178368695
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 06/06/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
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