
York boat - Wikipedia
The York boat was a type of inland boat used by the Hudson's Bay Company to carry furs and trade goods along inland waterways in Rupert's Land, the watershed stretching from Hudson …
York Boat - The Canadian Encyclopedia
Feb 7, 2006 · The York boat, named for the Hudson’s Bay Company’s York Factory, was one of three types of inland boats (the others being scows and sturgeon-heads) used by the HBC in …
York Boats - The Canadian Inland Fur Trade Flee - Nauticapedia
The York boat was an inland boat used by the Hudson’s Bay Company to carry furs and trade goods along inland waterways in Rupert’s Land and the Columbia District. It was named after …
York Boat - Manitoba Métis Federation
May 1, 2023 · For over a century, the York boat was the main mode of transportation between the inland trading posts and York Factory, the major transshipment point at the mouth of the …
The York Boat - Winnipegosis Museums
A modification of the fishing boats on the Orkney Islands, which itself was derived from the design of Viking longships, the York boat was constructed to be able to carry large loads of freight, …
In the early 1800s, the employees of William Sinclair, a Metis Chief Factor from York Factory, developed a new shallow-draught watercraft of Orcadian-Viking influenced design, the York …
Heroes, Heroines, and History: York Boats
Jun 5, 2015 · Starting in 1749, the HBC built flat-bottomed York boats, 36-46 feet long, with pointed bows and angled sterns making beaching, launching and navigating the low inland …
The York Boat - Manitoba Historical Society
Thus the York boat was a very distinctive craft, faintly suggesting the Viking long ship. The boat was about twenty-eight feet long at the keep and thirty-six from tip to tip, eight feet wide in the …
YORK BOAT Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of YORK BOAT is a large rowboat used for hauling freight on inland waterways in the Canadian Northwest.
Rowing the York Boats - NANCY MARGUERITE ANDERSON
Jun 1, 2019 · The York boats waited with their white sails wound around the great masts, the masts lowered across the thwarts and the long, heavy oars lying inside the gunwales. They …