- Adam Grant Horne
Adam Grant Horne (
1831 -August 10 ,1901 ) was aHudson's Bay Company employee at theColony of Vancouver Island , a municipal politician and a businessman. He was born inEdinburgh, Scotland and died atNanaimo, British Columbia . He married Elizabeth Bate whose brother, Mark Bate, also an HBC employee, was the first Mayor of Nanaimo.Horne arrived in
British Columbia as a labourer in 1851 aboard the immigrant ship "Tory" Cite book | last =Mackie | first =Richard Somerset | title =The Wilderness Profound, Victorian Life on the Gulf of Georgia | location=Victoria, BC | publisher =Sono Nis Press | year =1995 | isbn = 1-55039-058-9] rp|39 and was in charge of the company store in Nanaimo when, in 1862, the company sold out. After operating a business on his own account in Nanaimo, he took further employment with the HBC first at its Port Simpson post and then took charge of itsComox operation from 1865 to 1878 when the post there was closed as well. At that time Horne returned to business on his own account in Nanaimo where he also served as an alderman.In 1856 Horne led what is thought to have been the first crossing of mid-Vancouver Island by a European. He was to ascertain whether a trail existed from the present location of
Qualicum Beach, British Columbia , on Vancouver Island's east coast in the hopes of establishing trade with theNuu-chah-nulth who lived on the west coast. At the mouth of theQualicum River , Horne's party and their native guides observed a large fleet ofHaida canoes approaching and hid in trees. They observed these attackers holding human heads. When they came to the mouth of the river, they came upon the charred remains of the village of theQualicum people and the mutilated bodies of its inhabitants. [Elms p 20, citing William Wyford Walkem, Stories of Early British Columbia, "Adam Horne's trip across Vancouver Island" (Vancouver, BC: Published by News Advertiser, 1914) p 41.]Horne's expedition found the existing trail used by natives as a trade route across the island.
Horne Lake, at the headwaters of the Qualicum River, is named for Horne.
ources
*cite book | last = Wylie | first = Brad | title = Qualicum Beach, A History | publisher = Wylie: Qualicum Beach, BC | year = 2003 | id = ISBN 0-9696050-1-3
*cite book | last = Elms | first = Lindsay | title = Beyond Nootka, A Historical Perspective of Vancouver Island Mountains | publisher = Misthorn Press: Courtenay, BC | year = 1996 | id = ISBN 0-9680159-0-5
*Citation | last =Walbran | first = Captain John T. | title =British Columbia Place Names, Their Origin and History | url= http://www.nosracines.ca/e/toc.aspx?id=3545 |place=Vancouver/Toronto | publisher =Douglas & McIntyre | year =1971 | edition =Facsimile reprint of 1909 edition | isbn = 0-88894-143-9References
External links
* [http://www.bcarchives.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/www2i/.visual/img_med/dir_101/a_02230.gif] [http://www.bcarchives.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/www2i/.visual/img_med/dir_149/h_03527.gif] [http://www.bcarchives.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/www2i/.visual/img_med/dir_175/a_08365.gif] Images of Adam Grant Horne at BC Archives.
*cite web | last = Robinson | first = George | title = The Bate Family of Nanaimo | url = http://www.crunchers.bc.ca/robinson/bate_family.html|accessdate=2008-07-04
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