Fort de Praries
Can$26.95
Brock Silversides
Fort Edmonton was a prairie institution and icon from 1795 to 1915. It
was both a physical edifice and a community, not to mention a touchstone of
western Canadian commercial history. Its story is rich in drama and colour: Métis
fiddlers at midnight, dwarves firing cannons, duelling clergy, never-ending
public drumming, secret agents, the raising of the skull-and-crossbones flag,
bears quaffing cold drinks—at times it seemed like a circus had taken up
residence there. It is also a chronicle of intimidation and murder, battles
between whites and First Nations, epidemics and famines, destruction by fire,
whiskey traders, horse stealing, mutinies, rebellion and, finally, government
neglect and stealthy demolition.
A wealth of both accurate and questionable written descriptions of the fort were
produced over the years. A rich body of visual representations was also
created—sketches, engravings, book and magazine illustrations, and paintings
and photographs relating to different periods. It is from the accumulation of
all these documents that the fascinating story of Fort Edmonton is pieced
together and told in all its glory.
BROCK SILVERSIDES is the director of Media Commons (audiovisual library,
media archives and microtext) at the University of Toronto Libraries. He hails
from Saskatchewan, spent many years in Alberta and now spreads good news of the
West to the eastern regions. He is the author of several books, including The
Face Pullers, Shooting Cowboys, Copying People and Prairie Sentinels.