Forgot your password?

The Beaver Shares Twenty Historic Yuletide Celebrations

A Fur Trade Christmas Pudding
The Beaver December 1929

Dear Folks at Home — I note that you are solicitous about my welfare at this festive season. Well, don’t worry, the omens aregood. We have at present time in the ice-house two sides of beef, two pigs,…


 

Arctic Christmas
The Beaver December 1936

Preconceived ideas about chilly cheerless Christmases near the North Pole were all wrong. Mr. Finnie found a great deal of fun of an unusual sort when he spent a Christmas Day at Coppermine, Northwest Territories.







At The New Year
The Beaver January 1922

The Old Year has faded backstage. The spotlight falls on that young stripling, 1922, which like every other youngster is of most engaging interest…



Calgary News and Views of Happenings Christmas Announcements
The Beaver December 1920

The Calgary H.B.C. family extends to all comrades in the service a very hearty Xmas Greeting coupled with sincere wishes for a bright and prosperous New Year.



 

Christmas At Fort Edmonton and Ye Olde English Fare
The Beaver December 1927

Christmas At Fort Edmonton — On Christmas Day the flag was hoisted, and all appeared in their best and gaudiest style to do hour to the holiday.

Ye Olde English Fare — The brave days of old were distinguished by a hearty and profuse hospitality.


 

Christmas At Fort Pitt
The Beaver December 1945

Christmas was coming to old Fort Pitt on the North Saskatchewan, still in that year of 1884 an outpost of the white man’s civilization, and preparations were afoot to celebrate in becoming manner, according to custom, that time-honoured festival of peace on earth, good will toward men.



 

Christmas At Moose Factory
The Beaver December 1942

Our dog-team journey up James Bay just before Christmas was for business. Doug Sinclair and I were making Fur Country, a colour film on trapping for the National Film Board of Canada. We could not possibly put into the film those Christmas scenes of which we ourselves were a part — scenes of the winter holiday season in the North which few visitors witness.


Christmas Crackers Jokes and Musings
The Beaver December 1923

Control Your Eyes
“Awful accident in the train today.”  “What was it?” 
“A woman had her eye on a seat and a man sat on it.”
 

Christmas Fare of Old England and A Lonely Christmas Day
The Beaver December 1932

Christmas Fare of Old England — At Christmas time, more than any other in the year, traditional English dishes come into their own…

A Lonely Christmas Day — During the winter of 1887, I had an invitation from the officer in charge to spend Christmas at that place…

Christmas Forty Years Ago
The Beaver December 1923

On the day before Christmas and during the week, Indians with their families might be seen slowly wending their way to the Hudson’s Bay post…




Christmas Igloo
The Beaver December 1956

At Pelly Bay, which is about 1400 miles due north of Fort William the Eskimos last winter build a huge K’aggek or community igloo in which to celebrate Christmas.





Christmas in The Fur Trade
The Beaver December 1941

Christmastime down the years has been celebrated by the men of the Hudson’s Bay Company in many far, strange corners of the continent.




Christmas On the Slave River
The Beaver December 1949

These pictures were taken at Fort Fitzgerald and Smith at Christmastime. Both these settlements can now look back on seventy-five years of continuous activity.



Dear Santa
The Beaver December 1942

Once upon a time, there was a little girl called Barbara who lived in Ireland. When she was six years old, she wrote a letter to Santa Claus, addressing it to him care of the Hudson’s bay Company via Montreal.
 

For the Yuletide Feast
The Beaver December 1949

Nostalgic memories of a child’s “world of wonders” in the old Winnipeg store of the Hudson’s Bay Company. The fortnight just before Christmas was a slack time in the business and many companies planned a lay-off then.


Red River New Year
The Beaver December 1953

When the Governor General of Canada and the Lieutenant-Governors of the provinces hold receptions on New Year’s Day, they are not following a precedent set by the sovereign whom they represent. By choosing to hold their annual reception on that day in Canada they perpetuate an ancient custom of the country.



The Christmas Holyday
The Beaver December 1952

Down the centuries, Christmas has been celebrated in various ways at the lonely posts in the wilderness. From the earliest records of the Company in what is now Canada come accounts of how Hudson’s Bay men, in as fitting a manner as circumstances permitted, celebrated the birth of Jesus.

The Christmas Mail with apologies to Robert Browning
The Beaver December 1931

I sprang to the door, and George and he;
I shouted, Dave shouted, we shouted all three.
“The Mail!” cried the cook, as the freighters drew near; …



The Hudson's Bay Box
The Beaver June 1941

The greater event that came before Christmas was the arrival of the Box from the Hudson's Bay Company in Winnipeg.


Yuletide
The Beaver Winter 1960

When Christmas comes in the Eastern Arctic, Eskimo families from many scattered camps converge on a settlement for a few days of rejoicing and merry-making.

 

Rate This Article

1 = poor, 5 = excellent

12345
Current rating: 3.8 (9 ratings)

What do you think?

You must be a Canada's History member and be logged in to leave a comment.

Comments

No comments.

Support history Right Now! Donate
© Canada's History 2016
FeedbackForm
Feedback Analytics