James Knight (explorer)
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James Knight | |
|---|---|
| Personal details | |
| Born | Unknown date, c. 1640 |
| Died | Unknown date, c. 1721 (aged 81) |
| Occupation | Chief factor, carpenter, explorer |
Employer | |
| Known for | Disappearance on an expedition to find the Northwest Passage |
| Military service | |
| Conflict | |
James Knight (c. 1640 – c. 1721) was an English director of the Hudson's Bay Company and an explorer who disappeared on an expedition to find the Northwest Passage.
Knight was born in England and joined the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in 1676 as a carpenter. In 1682, he became chief factor of the trading post of Fort Albany in James Bay, where he became rich. In 1697, he bought stock in the HBC; in 1711, he gained a seat on the board of directors.
The long wars of the Grand Alliance and the Spanish Succession between England and France had spread to North America and battered the Company financially and logistically. Four of the Company's five trading posts were lost to the French; Knight led an expedition in 1693 that successfully recaptured Fort Albany, the only one retained by the English. However, among the provisions of the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 was the restoration of the captured posts.
In 1714, Knight was sent out to take possession of York Factory and restore the Company's fortunes. "Having served in a range of capacities in the Hudson’s Bay Company over the preceding 38 years, he was one of the most experienced fur traders ever to have taken charge of a company post."[1] Despite the damage to the fort from the French occupation, and the hardships of the climate, he succeeded in rebuilding the Company's business, and in 1719, it paid its first dividend in 20 years.