b. 1817-08-10
d. 1871-05-24
Dugald Mactavish was born in Argyllshire, Scotland, on 10 August 1817. He joined the
Hudson's Bay Company
as an apprentice clerk on 2 January 1833, travelling first to Moose Factory, then
to Michipicoten on
Lake Superior
in 1835, and to Lachine in 1838.
In June 1839, he was posted to
Fort Vancouver and became a clerk first class in June 1841.
He regularly travelled east with the annual express brigades from the Columbia Department.
Mactavish was promoted to chief trader on 1 June 1846
and placed in charge of the company's agency in
Hawaii. Promoted to chief factor in 1851, he returned to
Fort Vancouver in September 1853 to manage the company's new Oregon Department, remaining there
until June 1858, when he moved to
Fort Victoria and replaced
Douglas,
who resigned to accept the governorship of
British Columbia.
While there he and
John Work prepared a report on
Hudson's Bay Company claims to land
in
British Columbia. Mactavish returned to England on sick leave in February 1859, returning to
British Columbia in June 1860; he returned to England in November 1863. On 28 October 1864,
Mactavish left
London for
Washington, DC, to present
the
Hudson's Bay Company's claims to the joint Anglo-American commission to settle
HBC
claims in Oregon. He returned to
London when the commission's work was completed in 1867, only to be called
back to Montreal to fill the position vacated by Chief Factor Donald A. Smith. Mactavish
died in Montreal on 24 May 1871.