Series Introduction

Introduction to our family series

This series begins with a simple but powerful idea:
our family’s history is not a single line — it is a network.

Across more than 250 years, eleven ancestral lines converge through marriages, shared communities, and overlapping histories that stretch from Hudson Bay to Red River, across the Saskatchewan plains, and finally into British Columbia. Together, these lines form one of the most interconnected and traceable Métis kinship networks documented in Western Canada.

This project brings that network to life through a documentary‑style narrative grounded in real historical evidence. Each episode reconstructs a single ancestral line, while the series as a whole reveals how those lines interlock to form a unified story.

What This Series Is

This is not a traditional genealogy.
It is a multi‑lineage Métis super‑network, shaped by:

  • Orkney Hudson’s Bay Company labourers
  • Cree and Saulteaux matrilines
  • Red River Métis families
  • northern inland brigades
  • prairie homesteaders
  • HBC officers and administrators
  • a Scandinavian‑American immigrant line that later joins the prairie network

These threads come together to tell a story that spans:

  • the rise and fall of the fur trade
  • the formation of the Métis Nation
  • the Red River Settlement
  • the westward movement into Saskatchewan
  • the final convergence in British Columbia

This is the story of our family — and the story of the West.

How the Series Is Built

Every episode is grounded in verifiable historical evidence, using a clear three‑tier source system:

  • Primary Sources — original archival records
  • Genealogical & Archival Compilations (Used with Caution) — secondary reconstructions cross‑checked against primary evidence
  • Scholarly Works (Context Only) — academic histories that explain the world our ancestors lived in

Nothing is invented.
Uncertainties are acknowledged.
Cultural context is handled with care and respect.

How the Story Is Told

You requested a narrative that feels like a historical documentary — cinematic, immersive, and grounded in the archival record.

So the series is written to be:

  • historically accurate
  • emotionally resonant
  • accessible to all descendants
  • structured like a multi‑episode documentary
  • honest about what is known and what remains uncertain

Each episode stands alone, but together they form a single, continuous narrative.

Why This Story Matters

Most families can trace one or two major ancestral lines.
Ours has eleven — all interconnected.

This network reveals:

  • a rare dual‑homeland Métis ancestry
  • a dense kinship web linking northern and prairie communities
  • a Saskatchewan homestead cluster of exceptional cohesion
  • a continuous chain of leadership across generations
  • a westward movement that culminates in British Columbia

This is a story of endurance, adaptation, and community — a story that spans three centuries and half a continent. Our Family Story – 3 Worlds