NWC The York Factory Express evolved from an earlier route used by the Montreal-based
North West Company (NWC). During the
War of 1812 the NWC and their American competitors, the
Pacific Fur Company (PFC), struggled commercially over the
Columbia River basin. At the mouth of the Columbia was the principal station of the PFC,
Fort Astoria, established in 1811 and named after its principal owner,
John Jacob Astor. Although it was under threat of confiscation by the British during the War of 1812, the PFC was peaceably liquidated in 1813, when Fort Astoria and its stock in trade were sold to the NWC, and several of its employees also joined the NWC. Renaming Fort Astoria as Fort George, the NWC developed an overland supply route from there to its inland depot at
Fort William on
Lake Superior. In the ensuing years, the NWC continued to expand its operations in the
Pacific Northwest. Skirmishes with its major competitor, the
Hudson's Bay Company (HBC), had already flared into the
Pemmican War. The conflict ended in 1821 when the British Government pressured the NWC to merge with the HBC.
HBC , on the Columbia River (river mile 106) near the mouth of the Willamette River, in 1825.
George Simpson, the Governor of Hudson's Bay Company, visited the Columbia District in 1824–25, journeying from York Factory. With the help of
John Rowand, the
Chief Factor in charge at Fort Edmonton, George Simpson investigated a quicker route than previously used, following the
Saskatchewan River and crossing the mountains at
Athabasca Pass. This route was well known by many Northwesters, but after the merger they refused to share knowledge of it with the HBC. It wasn't until John Rowand beat George Simpson to Fort Assiniboine by nearly a month and Simpson threatened to shut down Fort Edmonton that Rowand let Simpson know about this route. This route was thereafter followed by the York Factory Express brigades.
James Sinclair was appointed in 1841 by Duncan Finlayson to guide over twenty settler families from the
Red River Colony to the Pacific Northwest. Upon arriving at
Fort Vancouver, fourteen of them were relocated to
Fort Nisqually, while the remaining seven families were sent to
Fort Cowlitz. Despite this, arrangements with the
Pugets Sound Agricultural Company, an HBC subsidiary, proved to be unsatisfactory for the settlers, who all gradually moved to the
Willamette Valley. ==Brigades==