Methye Portage

It was reached by Peter Pond in 1778 and abandoned in 1883 when steamboats began running on the Athabasca River with links to the railroad.The portage was in constant use until 1883 when the Canadian Pacific Railway reached Calgary ending more than 100 years as the main access to the north.[8] After the first Oblates opened a mission in Île-à-la-Crosse in 1846 [9] a Catholic priest was usually present when the brigades arrived at the portage.It was in this improvised little temple that I had the joy of singing High Mass on the Sunday after our arrival, and to celebrate the holy mysteries each day in front of more than three hundred and fifty people, both Métis and indigenous.[13] Another noted baptism at Methye Portage was Francois Beaulieu who was baptised in 1848 by Bishop Alexandre-Antonin Taché.The portage proper, which is 19 km (12 mi) long, began at Wallis Bay on the north side of Lac La Loche.[18] The Hudson's Bay Company had 10 employees at the fort who maintained the transportation depots at each end of the portage and brought in horses, oxen and carts for the season.Petitot wrote "While there were no more than 400 people gathered at the time on the south side of the portage they gave us a little understanding of the confusion of languages at the Tower of Babel.Along the Portage Trail there were marked graves from the fur trade era according to the following Oblate account written in 1933 by Father Louis Moraud.The English version is quoted: "In 1778 Peter Pond became the first white man to cross the 12 mile portage between Lac La Loche and the Clearwater River, thus opening the rich Athabasca region to direct trade.For over forty years, until the opening of the Edmonton-Fort Assiniboine trail, this portage was the only practical link with the Athabasca and the Peace and Mackenzie rivers beyond.
The Clearwater River valley from the portage by George Back in 1825
Lac La Loche with a view towards the Portage
This section of John Franklin's 1819-20 expedition map shows the fur trade route from Peter Pond Lake , up the La Loche River (Methye River), across Lac La Loche (Methye Lake), across the Portage to the west flowing Clearwater River then north up the Athabasca River . Early trading posts of the North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company are shown on the south west side of Lac La Loche.
Made by rdlaloche in 2011
Ice break-up on Lac La Loche May 13, 2013 (Ice covers the lake from about the middle of November to about the middle of May).
Grand RapidsSaskatchewan RiverCumberland HouseChurchill RiverFrog PortageÎle-à-la-CrosseSturgeon-Weir RiverFort ChipewyanClearwater RiverAthabasca RiverSaskatchewanportagesfur tradeMackenzie RiverPeter PondGrand PortageburbotAlexander MackenzieGeorge Backindigenous peoplesAnthony HendayRocky MountainsCanadian Pacific RailwayCalgaryYork boatsNorway HousesmallpoxSir Alexander MackenziePacific OceanLewis and Clark ExpeditionPortage La Loche BrigadeFort GarryYork FactoryRed River SettlementAlexis BonamiOblatesCatholicMétisChipewyanÉmile PetitotÉmile GrouardHigh MassLouis Laferte dit SchmidtJean-Baptiste ThibaultFrancois BeaulieuAlexandre-Antonin TachéLake WinnipegCumberland House, SaskatchewanLac Île-à-la-CrossePeter Pond LakeLac La LocheFort McMurrayJohn Franklin's1819-20 expedition mapLa Loche RiverNorth West CompanyHudson's Bay Companystaging areaIroquoisTower of BabelWoodland CreeSwampy CreeChippewaBeaverfur brigadesSir John RichardsonOblateNational Historic SiteCanadian Heritage RiverClearwater River Provincial ParkCanadian canoe routesContinental DivideProtected Areas in SaskatchewanNational parksGrasslands National ParkPrince Albert National ParkAthabasca Sand DunesBattlefords, TheBlackstrapBuffalo PoundCandle LakeCannington ManorClarence-Steepbank LakesCrooked LakeCypress HillsDanielsonDouglasDuck MountainEcho ValleyFort CarltonFort PittGood Spirit LakeGreat Blue Heron Provincial ParkGreenwater LakeKatepwa PointLac La RongeLast Mountain HouseMakwa LakeMeadow LakeMoose MountainNarrow HillsPike LakePorcupine HillsRowan's RavineSaskatchewan LandingSt. Victor PetroglyphsSteele NarrowsTouchwood Hills PostWildcat HillWood Mountain PostNational Historic Sites ofCanada in SaskatchewanAddison Sod HouseBatocheBattle of Cut KnifeBattle of Duck LakeBattle of Fish CreekBattleford Court HouseBell FarmBiggar stationCanadian Bank of CommerceClaybank Brick PlantCollege BuildingCypress Hills MassacreDoukhobor Dugout HouseDoukhobors at VereginEsterhazy Flour MillForestry Farm Park and ZooFormer Prince Albert City HallFort de la CorneFort BattlefordFort EspéranceFort LivingstoneFort PellyFort Qu'AppelleFort WalshFrenchman ButteGovernment HouseGravelbourg Ecclesiastical BuildingsGray Burial SiteHoly Trinity ChurchHumboldt Post OfficeKeyhole CastleLast Mountain Lake Bird SanctuaryMoose Jaw Court HouseMotherwell HomesteadNext of Kin Memorial AvenueOld Government House / Saint-Charles ScholasticatePrince Albert Arts CentreSaskatchewan Legislative Building and GroundsSaskatoon station (Canadian Pacific Railway)Seager Wheeler's Maple Grove FarmWanuskewinCarlton Trail Regional ParkCenotaphFishing Lake Regional ParkPalliser Regional ParkStatue of Sir John A. MacdonaldVictoria ParkWascana CentreMuseumsThe Evolution of Education MuseumHistorical Society MuseumMendel Art GalleryRCMP Heritage CentreRotary Museum of Police and CorrectionsRoyal Saskatchewan MuseumSaskatchewan Railway MuseumSaskatchewan Western Development MuseumNorth American fur tradeAthabascaAssiniboineColumbiaCaliforniaMontanaGreat PlainsNew CaledoniaNorth PacificAmerican Fur CompanyBent, St. Vrain & CompanyColumbia Fur CompanyCompany of One Hundred AssociatesDutch West India CompanyMissouri Fur CompanyMonjo CompanyNew Netherland CompanyPacific Fur CompanyRevillon FrèresRocky Mountain Fur CompanyRussian-American CompanyXY CompanyFrenchCanoe routesYork Factory ExpressLonghunterMountain manBeaver WarsIndian TradeDeerskin tradeIron ConfederacyTraplineSiberian fur trade