- George Cartwright (trader)
George Cartwright (
February 12 ,1739 –May 19 ,1819 ), trader, explorer, born inMarham ,England , died unmarried in nearbyMansfield , England.Cartwright's father, John, first pursued a naval career and through it was closely connected with George’s early ventures in Newfoundland later resigned in protest against participation in the
American Revolutionary War and became a radicalpamphleteer .Cartwright was born at Marham in
Nottinghamshire , the eldest brother ofEdmund Cartwright , inventor of the power loom and of John Cartwright, notable English parliamentary reformer and Radical. He was educated atNewark-on-Trent and atRandall’s Academy , inHeath ,West Yorkshire and at the age of 15 or 16 as a gentleman cadet in theRoyal Military Academy atWoolwich ,London . In 1755 he became an ensign in the39th Foot , but to his regret missed being with the detachment commanded byRobert Clive at the retaking of Fort William,Calcutta , the capture ofChandernagore from the French, and the victory at theBattle of Plassey over theNawab of Bengal .Cartwright was promoted lieutenant on
February 2 ,1759 . Early in 1760 he accompanied theMarquess of Granby toGermany asaide-de-camp and served as a staff officer with the British contingent under Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick. He returned to England at the end of theSeven Years' War as a captain in the army. He transferred to the37th Foot in 1766.In the spring of 1766, on John’s appointment as first lieutenant of "the Guernsey", flagship of Commodore
Hugh Palliser , George sailed with the governor-designate to Newfoundland where he spent a season cruising along the northeast coast. On his second voyage in the spring of 1768 to Newfoundland with John, his brother, Cartwright was in the expedition dispatched by Palliser under John’s command into the interior of the island to establish friendly relations with theBeothuks atRed Indian Lake .Cartwright's next career was a trader and entrepreneur in
Labrador where his operations from 1770 to 1786 was the stretch of coastline betweenCape Charles, Labrador , where he occupied Nicholas Darby’s old site, andHamilton Inlet . There were years of success, but others of failure, and in 1778 his posts were plundered by Americanprivateers with losses amounting to £14,000. This came about when his servant Dominick Kinnien defected to join the crew of the Boston privateerJohn Grimes .In his relations with the native peoples of Labrador, especially the
Inuit , Cartwright displayed an honesty which led to mutual trust. In 1772 he took a family of five Inuit to England, where they created considerable interest, meeting with the king, members of theRoyal Society includingJoseph Banks , andJames Boswell who reported to a skepticalSamuel Johnson his ability to communicate with them by sign language. On the return trip to Newfoundland all of the Inuit had died of smallpox except forCaubvick .Mount Caubvick , the highest coastal point on the east coast of theNorth America and is the second highest mountain in Canada east of the Rocky Mountains, was named for her.After 1787 Cartwright resided in England. In 1793 he gave evidence before a committee of the House of Commons on affairs in Newfoundland and Labrador. His military experience led to his appointment during the
Napoleonic Wars asbarrack master atNottingham where in later years, known by the sobriquet "Old Labrador," he was a distinguished and popular figure.His name is borne by Cartwright, a settlement at the entrance to
Sandwich Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador . He had an unparalleled love for Labrador until his death, as his niece affirmed in her biography of his brother John, and as was evidenced in his own work::"Fish, Fowl and Ven'son, now our tables grace":"Roast Beaver too, and e'ery Beast of Chase.":"Luxurious living this! who'd wish for more?":"Were QUIN alive, he'd haste to Labrador!"Publications
*Cartwright's journal was published in 1792 as "Journal of Transactions and Events, During a Residence of Nearly Sixteen Years on the Coast of Labrador". It is the primary source for
John Steffler 's 1992 novel "The Afterlife of George Cartwright", a fictional account of Cartwright's experiences.
* In 1911, an edited version was published byCharles Wendell Thomas as "Captain Cartwright and his Journal". This edition was reprinted most recently in 2000.ee also
*
List of people of Newfoundland and Labrador External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=2314 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.