Henry Newsham Peers
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Henry Newsham Peers | |
|---|---|
Portrait of Henry Newsham Peers, chief trader for the Hudson's Bay Company, about 1840 | |
| Born | 17 March 1821 |
| Died | 27 March 1864 (aged 42–43) |
| Occupations | fur trader, chief trader, politician, pioneer |
| Spouse | Eliza Yale |
| Children | 4 |

Captain Henry Newsham Peers (1821 – 1864) was a Canadian fur trader, military officer and British Columbia pioneer. He became a clerk in the Montreal Department of the Hudson's Bay Company, eventually rising to the rank of chief trader. He also established Fort Hope in British Columbia, and served as Captain under Gov. Isaac Stevens during American Indian Wars of 1855-1856.
Henry Newsham Peers was born on March 17, 1821, at Lymington, England, to Captain H. Peers, son of Count Julianus Petrus de Linnée, member of a noble family from Brittany, France.[1] The Count was married to Mary Eliza Peers, and died while returning from Gatton Park in England.[1] Peers's father, Capt. Henry Peers, born de Linné, was a magistrate, Commissioner of Taxes, and graduate of Trinity College at Oxford University.[1] He took the surname of Peers by Royal license as the heir of his mother Mary Eliza Peers.[1]
Henry Newsham Peers was named after his great-great-granduncle, Col. Henry Newsham Peers, commander of the Prince of Wales's Own Royal Regiment, and son-in-law of Sir Charles Holt of Oxfordshire.[1] Col. Peers succeeded to Gen. Joseph Sabine and served under Gen. John Huske. He was promoted to the rank of Major General at the Battle of Dettingen under King George II of Great Britain, but died at Dettingen before receiving his new title.[1]
Peers's great-grandfather, Newsham Peers, inherited Alveston Manor, his family ancestral estate, from the male line of Robert Peers, wine merchant of Bristol, England, who arrived at Alveston around 1540.[2][1] He later sold the estate, having no direct male heir, for about £39,500 in 1810.[2][1] The property would later be in possession of Lieut.-Colonel R. H. R. Brocklebank.[2]


