McKAY, Elizabeth 1
- Born: About 1795
- Marriage (1): GRANT, Cuthbert younger, Fur Trader and Canadian Pioneer in 1815 1
User ID: P917
Elizabeth married Cuthbert GRANT younger, Fur Trader and Canadian Pioneer, son of Cuthbert GRANT elder, merchant, partner of Northwest Fur Company and Unnamed WIFE 'of French-Cree descent', in 1815.1 (Cuthbert GRANT younger, Fur Trader and Canadian Pioneer was born about 1793 in Fort Tremblante, Saskatchewn, Canada 2 3, baptised on 12 October 1801 in St Gabriel Street Presbyterian Church, Montreal, Canada,1 died on 15 July 1854 in Canada 3 and was buried in St Francis Xavier's, White Horse Plains, Manitoba, Canada 1.)
Marriage Notes:
"Memorable Manitobans: Cuthbert James Grant (1793-1854)
Metis Leader
Born in 1793 at River Tremblante (near present-day Kamsack, Saskatchewan) the second son of a Scottish father, Cuthbert Grant, trader and partner of the North West Company, and a mother of aboriginal blood. After his father's death in 1799 he was taken to Montreal where he was baptized in the St. Gabriel Street Presbyterian Church on 12 October 1801. He was probably sent to Scotland to be educated.
In 1812 he returned to the West with the North West Company canoe brigade and was placed in charge of a small outpost on the Qu'Appelle River. He had three wives, Elizabeth McKay, 1815; Madelaine Desmarais, 1818 and in 1823, he married Marie, oldest daughter of Angus McGillis. His qualities of leadership, added to his racial background, quickly made him one of the leaders of the Métis. The North West Company, then engaged in the struggle with the Hudson's Bay Company, made him Captain-General of the half-breeds early in 1816. He was the leader of the Bois-Brulés at the massacre of Seven Oaks on 19 June 1816. In 1817 he surrendered himself and went to Montreal to face murder charges. In 1818 he returned to the West, subsequently being cleared of all indictments in the courts of both Upper and Lower Canada.
In 1823 he was employed by the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Garry, but resigned in 1824 and accepted a grant of land on White Horse Plain (St. Francois Xavier). Here he founded a settlement, known as Grantown, where many Métis families joined him. In 1828 he was given the title of 'Warden of the Plains,' with an annual salary of £200 and the duty of preventing illicit trade in furs. He held this title until 1849. From 1835 until his death he was a member of the Council of Assiniboia. On 12 February 1835 he was appointed a Justice of the Peace for the Fourth District of Assiniboia and on 20 March 1839, one of the two Sheriffs of Assiniboia.
Grant is known to have had considerable knowledge and experience in medicine. Apart from leading the settlers of White Horse Plain, Grant also farmed and built one of the first water mills on the banks of the Assiniboine River, recreated as Grant's Old Mill in Winnipeg. He died on 15 July 1854 and was buried in the church of St. Francois Xavier. He is commemorated by Grant Avenue in Winnipeg."
from MHS Archives 1
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