Primary Sources That Speak Across Centuries
Forty-eight primary source documents bring historical voices directly to students—a collection that has grown substantially to reflect the full breadth of Canadian exploration history. These are not summaries or paraphrases.
Early explorers speak through Cartier's account of first contact at Gaspé in 1534, Champlain's founding of Quebec in 1608, and La Salle's claim to Louisiana in 1682. The Hudson's Bay Company era comes alive through the journals of William Stuart, Moses Norton, Philip Turnor, Peter Fidler, and Samuel Hearne. Students read Alexander Mackenzie's own words as his men threatened mutiny in the Rocky Mountain passes, then followed Indigenous trails to reach the Pacific. Simon Fraser describes his canyon descent. David Thompson's field notes and references to Charlotte Small reveal the human dimensions of the greatest land survey in North American history. Dr. John Rae's report on the Franklin expedition, George Back's letters to the Admiralty, and Joseph Burr Tyrrell's accounts of the Barren Lands complete a documentary record spanning from 1534 to the Klondike Survey of 1898.
Each document includes grade-specific annotations. A fourth-grader reading about York Factory's trade records encounters different explanatory notes than a twelfth-grader analyzing the same source. Vocabulary definitions, historical context, and discussion questions scale appropriately, making primary source work accessible across the K-12 spectrum.