TypeFort In use1809-1821 Opened1978 Phone+1 204-233-9470
Built1809 Designated1924 ProvinceManitoba Controlled byNorth West Company
Battles/warsPemmican War
Battle of Seven Oaks Official nameForts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar National Historic Site of Canada Address866 St Joseph St, Winnipeg, MB R2H 0G4, Canada SimilarSaint Boniface Cathedral, Le Musée de Saint‑Bon, Fort Garry, The Forks - Winnipeg, Winnipeg Railway Museum Profiles FacebookTwitterYouTube
Fort gibraltar
Fort Gibraltar was a fort built in 1809 by the North West Company in present-day Manitoba, Canada. It was located at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers in or near the area now known as The Forks in the city of Winnipeg. Fort Gibraltar was renamed Fort Garry after the merger of North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company in 1821.
In the early 19th century fur-trading was the main industry of Western Canada. Two companies had an intense competition over the trade. The first, the Hudson's Bay Company, was a London, England-based organization. The second, the North West Company, was based in Montreal. Hudson's Bay Company was distinctly English in its culture and flavour while the North West Company was a mix of French, Scottish and First Nations cultures.
The voyageurs of the North West Company were a highly mobile group of fur traders. They established temporary encampments in the forks region that later became Winnipeg.
In 1809 the North West Company built Fort Gibraltar. About half a mile north the Selkirk settlers and HBC employees built Fort Douglas which was started in 1813 and completed in 1815. There were many conflicts between the mostly Scottish employees of the HBC and the NWC employees, who were mostly French-Canadians and Métis.(see Pemmican War)
On March 17, 1816, Fort Gibraltar was captured and destroyed by Robert Semple, new Governor of the Red River Colony. The action was ruled illegal by British authorities and the North West Company was given permission to rebuild the fort in 1817.
On March 26, 1821, The North West Company was merged with its rival under the name of the Hudson's Bay Company.
The site of the fort was designated a National Historic Site in 1924 as part of the "Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar National Historic Site of Canada".
Chronology of Fort Gibraltar
1809 The North West Company builds Fort Gibraltar
1816 Fort Gibraltar is captured and destroyed by the Red River Colony
1817 Fort Gibraltar is rebuilt by the North West Company
1821 The North West Company merges with Hudson's Bay Company – Fort Gibraltar continues its operations under the Hudson's Bay Company standard
1822 Fort Gibraltar is renamed Fort Garry
1835 Fort Garry is rebuilt after being destroyed by the 1826 flood and the name changed to Upper Fort Garry
Fort Gibraltar Museum
A reconstructed Fort Gibraltar located in Whittier Park in St. Boniface, Winnipeg was built in the late 1970s for the Festival du Voyageur, the largest winter festival in Western Canada. In the summer, the museum operates living history demonstrations of life in the fur trading post as in 1815.