Hudson Bay Company Trader William McBean

Richard Monacelli portrays Willliam McBean
This is one presentation you don't want to miss. William McBean, portrayed by business management consultant Richard Monacelli, is a treasure trove of information on the life and times of the middle 1800s. He presents a picture of life as real as though you were suddenly transported back 150 years.
Come to Fort Walla Walla Museum and hear what it was like to be a fur trader and manager of the only business in the area in the late 1840's, the Hudson Bay Company's Fort Walla Walla. Although today we think of forts as military establishments, in the 1800s a trading post was often given the name "fort."
The first Fort Walla Walla was built at the mouth of the Walla Walla River and was one of the earliest Northwest outposts for trading furs and other items with the local Native American population. The fort was built in 1818 by the Northwest Trading Company, which soon was bought out by the Hudson Bay Company. The structure was so substantial that its first factor (manager) called it the "Gibraltar of the Northwest," however, that sturdy outpost lasted only 10 years before being destroyed by fire. A second fort built on the same site had also succumbed to fire by the time William McBean came on the scene as manager of the third Fort Walla Walla.
William McBean, of British and Indian parentage, was born in Canada about 1807 and came to the Walla Walla region in 1846. He was the chief factor in charge of the Hudson's Bay Company fort at the mouth of the Walla Walla River at the time of the Whitman Massacre in 1847. He left Fort Walla Walla in 1855 at the time of the Indian wars and later returned to the valley with his Indian wife and children. He continued to reside in Walla Walla and was active in assisting various Catholic institutions until his death in 1872.
McBean presents myriad details on the times he lived in and the people and cultures with whom he worked. He shares with his audience many different examples of fur trade items, including pelts, beadwork, axes, bowls, pottery, clothing, and smoking pipes. McBean paints a colorful picture of his life and times, giving visitors a very real experience of Walla Walla in the middle 1800s.
Performances begin at 2:00 p.m. in the pioneer settlement at Fort Walla Walla Museum. Visitors are encouraged to question the Living History re-enactors about their lives and times. The Museum is open daily, 10 am - 5 pm, April through October; 10 am - 4 pm, November1 through December 23; and weekdays, 10 am - 4 pm, January through March.
Admission is free to Fort Walla Walla Museum members,
eligible service personnel & their familes through
the Blue Star Museums program, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute's
Inwai Circle cardholders,
enrolled members of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, and all children under 6;
$3/children
6-12; $6/seniors (62+) and students; $7/adults.
Your admission fee today may be applied to a membership,
priced beginning at $27. For more information, contact Fort Walla Walla Museum at 509-525-7703, or email: info@fortwallawallamuseum.org. |