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William Alexander Mouat (9 April 1821[1] – 11 April 1871)[2] was a British seafarer. Born in London, he spent much of his career with the Hudson's Bay Company in British Columbia on the west coast of Canada. He became master of several merchant ships including the Otter and the Labouchere. His last posting was at Fort Rupert where he died in a canoe accident. He was married to Mary Ann Ainsley and they had eight children.
^London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813–1917
^England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1966, 1973–1995
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WilliamAlexanderMouat (9 April 1821 – 11 April 1871) was a British seafarer. Born in London, he spent much of his career with the Hudson's Bay Company...
Elizabeth Mouat (born 1996), English actress Kit Mouat (1920–1986), English poet Mike Mouat (born 1954), Canadian hockey player WilliamAlexanderMouat (1821–1871)...
Scottish and French Canadian descent. He lived with his great uncle, Colonel William Fraser, for a while as a child. Though baptized Roman Catholic, he was...
businessman from Boston, Massachusetts, who also founded a post at Fort William, in present-day Portland, Oregon, as part of a plan for a new trading and...
finding and following the Humboldt River, later named for German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt, 330 miles (530 km) west to its dry sink in present-day Nevada...
Francis Benjamin Pillet, Alexander Ross, Augustus (Augustin) Roussil, Benjamin Roussel, David Stuart, Robert Stuart, William Wallace, and Henry Weeks...
winter with the Secwépemc people. In May of the following year, trader Alexander Ross established a post, which was known as "Fort Cumcloups". The rival...
establishment of Fort Vancouver, the HBC's largest westward fort was Fort William in present-day Ontario, which the company gained through its merger with...
McLeod James McMillan William Henry McNeill Thomas McKay John McLeod John McLoughlin John McLoughlin, Jr. WilliamAlexanderMouat Peter Skene Ogden Pierre-Chrysologue...
indigenous pathways, or "grease trails", one of which had been followed by Alexander MacKenzie in 1793. By the late 1830s HBC traders of New Caledonia were...
McLeod James McMillan William Henry McNeill Thomas McKay John McLeod John McLoughlin John McLoughlin, Jr. WilliamAlexanderMouat Peter Skene Ogden Pierre-Chrysologue...
McLeod James McMillan William Henry McNeill Thomas McKay John McLeod John McLoughlin John McLoughlin, Jr. WilliamAlexanderMouat Peter Skene Ogden Pierre-Chrysologue...
at Chemaway and lived there intermittently until 1831. In January 1828 Alexander McKenzie was killed along with several other HBC employees on Hood Canal...
fur trading operations west of the Rockies, including Fort Hall and Fort William, which he had built on an island at the confluence of the Columbia and...
Soon Naukane was traveling east as well, crossing the continent to Fort William (today's Thunder Bay, Ontario) on Lake Superior. From there, he traveled...
Ocean. Vol. 1. Washington D.C.: Severely Tucker. 1855, p. 420. Lewis, S. William. Information concerning the Establishment of Fort Colvile. The Washington...
McLeod James McMillan William Henry McNeill Thomas McKay John McLeod John McLoughlin John McLoughlin, Jr. WilliamAlexanderMouat Peter Skene Ogden Pierre-Chrysologue...