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Rev. James Nisbet 1866 at kista-pinnanick. Or Peter Pond in 1778 (detail)

circa 1906

On June 7, 1866, the Presbyterian Rev. James Nisbet set out from the Red River colony in Manitoba to found a church mission in the Saskatchewan River valley.

On July . . .

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On June 7, 1866, the Presbyterian Rev. James Nisbet set out from the Red River colony in Manitoba to found a church mission in the Saskatchewan River valley.

On July 26, 1866, with his guide George Flett, — a Scots Metis and fluent speaker of Cree, and later a renowned Presbyterian missionary himself — they landed at kista-pinnanick, long a major meeting ground for Cree people.

Now called Prince Albert, the city’s population was about 36,000 in 2016; about 40% are of Indigenous descent.


OR could the boatman be the famous North West Company explorer Peter Pond, who came by river in 1778?

Historic Inscription:
Peter Pond, a shrewd independent trader, sparked a revolution in the Canadian fur trade. In 1778, he left Sturgeon Fort, near here, on an arduous journey to open direct trade with Aboriginal people in the fur-rich Athabasca country. Quickly capitalizing on his success, he and a number of Montréal merchants formed the original North West Company in 1779. Pond brilliantly expanded the Athabasca trade using detailed maps he drew from Aboriginal accounts. His initiative had a profound influence in developing the route to the Arctic and the Pacific.

Original Plaque: 4 miles west of city Shellbrook Highway, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
Explorer and Fur Trader Built the first trading post on this site, 1776. One of the founders of the North West Company, in which he served unitil 1790. He oopened the North Saskatchewan River and Athabaskan districts, kept a journal, and made the first general map of the area. Born and died in Milford, Conn., 1740-1807

Existing plaque: Shellbrook Highway, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
In the spring’of 1778 a group of Canadian traders who had wintered at a post on this site pooled their remaining stock of trade goods and sent one of their number, Peter Pond, into the Athabasca country, thereby opening one of the richest fur areas on the continent. Pond was one of the original partners of the North West Company until his implication in two murders forced him to withdraw from the trade and retire to his native Connecticut in 1790. His discoveries and geographical theories had a profound influence on the explorations of Alexander Mackenzie who succeeded him in Athabasca.

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  • Possibly Hobbs, Montreal, 1906
  • St. Paul’s Presbyterian (now Prince Albert Baptist Church) ****
  • Saskatchewan
  • Prince Albert (6)
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