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the hudson's bay trading company was founded in 1670 with a royal charter from king charles the II. there is a large edifice in downtown edmonton that tells me so. it has the coat of arms of the hudson's bay and it's all carved rather impressively. i doubt that the building is more than 100 years old. i suspect it was built in edmonton's boom in the 40s after they found the oil.
in 1670, london was a large city. it had palaces and houses and shops and carriages and factories and everything. london was founded in 43. that's 2000 years ago. megpye tells me while we are driving downtown the other day that the epcor (hydro - water and power) plant is built on a sacred site, a burial ground and that there is a vigil every summer for three days. the fires burn, the drummers drum and the dancers beat out the rhythm with their feet nonstop.
i wonder if that memory remained alive in the minds of the cree or blackfoot whose land it was. it was only 150 - 200 years ago. or was it lost, then relearned, resurrected. i wonder if anyone will have a link to the past that contained not a power plant and transformer station, but a graveyard. will there be some elder who recalls a grandparent saying there was a special burial place just over there -on the north river bank of the saskatchewan.
when i was in europe this time last year, i marvelled at the houses in the streets of amsterdam. they often had the year they were built in the keystones above the doorways. this custom i recognized from special historical houses in ontario, some of which i remembered had stones reading in the early 1800s. how completely amazing and strange it was seeing dates in the 1400s not on special historical houses, but ordinary houses that people lived in.
here 200 years is a vast distance in time, practically unknowable. more familiar seems the ancient geological stretches of time that saw the great beds of oil and coal and dinosaur bones laid down in the earth. this is the oil city. not the trading post city. where are the trails that the traders walked? can anyone point to the route that anthony henday walked in on? or do we only know the history of the new expressway named in his honour. what happened here before the oil boom? before the settlers? before the trading post? no one seems to know. even wiki has only one vague sentence of edmonton's history before 1795. it speaks in a geological time frame, of ancient ice fields retreating. what was here on the riverbank in 1795? a village? a settlement? hunting grounds? a portage? nothing? megpye promised me we'd go to the vigil this summer and add our feet to the dance. i'll ask them
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