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Hudson's and landmarks
Nearby landmarks include the Hudson's Bay Company's Queen Street store, the south end of the Eaton Centre, the Old City Hall courts, Toronto City Hall, the Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres, and Massey Hall.
Nearby landmarks include the Toronto Reference Library, the Hudson's Bay Company's The Bay Uptown department store located in the Hudson Bay Centre at 2 Bloor Street East, and 2 Bloor Street West.

Hudson's and are
The Hudson's Bay Company Archives, a collection of the company's many records and maps, are located in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Current members of the board of directors of the Hudson's Bay Company are:
* 1611 – The mutinous crew of Henry Hudson's fourth voyage sets Henry, his son and seven loyal crew members adrift in an open boat in what is now Hudson Bay ; they are never heard from again.
* 1870 – Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory are transferred to Canada from the Hudson's Bay Company, and the province of Manitoba and the Northwest Territories are established from these vast territories.
Peter Hudson's zoetropes ( sometimes called Hudzoetropes ) are exhibited at various festivals and special events internationally throughout the year.
Among the past and present groups formed by royal charter are the British East India Company ( 1600 ), the Hudson's Bay Company, the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company ( P & O ), the British South Africa Company, and some of the former British colonies on the North American mainland, also the Bank of England.
The two explorers are famous not only for their explorations and trade, but also notably for their participation in the formation of the Hudson's Bay Company.
The men he met in the mountains, Rip learns, are rumored to be the ghosts of Hendrick ( Henry ) Hudson's crew.
These four are considered Hudson's original inhabitants.
Many exclusive fur designers, including Louis Féraud, Givenchy, Black Diamond Mink, and Grosvenor, are included in the highly successful Hudson's Bay Company Fur Salons.
While the Hudson's Bay Company shops appear mainly in flagship stores and its Banff, Alberta location, products from the Hudson's Bay Company Collection ( not including limited edition items ) are also available at other locations, most notably the Point Blanket.
As supporters the elk and moose are derived from the Hudson's Bay Company coat of arms, the first defacto government of Michigan when it was called Canada, and depict great animals of Michigan.
* November 19-The Deed of Surrender recognizes the purchase of Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory from the Hudson's Bay Company: the lands are placed under the direct control of the Crown, but do not yet formally belong to Canada.
The fur trader James Gaddy and the Hudson's Bay Company explorer David Thompson are traditionally considered to be the first people of European origin to discover the Bow River.
A Staten Island resident, Mr. Way saved some special pieces to be displayed at Snug Harbor — even though his pieces are in high demand at a number of city museums, given 2009's importance as the 400th anniversary of Dutch explorer Henry Hudson's discovery of New York.
The blankets are ones Watt collected over several years, including many Hudson's Bay point blankets that were given to Native Americans in trade by the Hudson's Bay Company during the 19th century.
Hudson's movements after leaving the Queen's court in late 1644, aged 25 years, are unknown.
* 2001: Much to the dismay of shoppers in Minneapolis / Saint Paul and Detroit, Dayton's and Hudson's are rebranded with the Marshall Field's nameplate, which has a higher national profile.
In the third episode Lester receives a piece of fan mail that reads: " Since you are on the show and see her a lot, could you get Betty Hudson's autograph for me?
The interpretive galleries are Earth History, Arctic / Sub-Arctic, Boreal Forest, Nonsuch, Hudson's Bay Company, Parklands / Mixed Woods, Grasslands and Urban.
Its member municipalities are the cities of Fort St. John and Dawson Creek, the district municipalities of Tumbler Ridge, Chetwynd, Taylor, and Hudson's Hope, and the village of Pouce Coupe.

Hudson's and Hudson
On 23 January 2012, The Financial Post reported that Richard Baker ( owner of NDRC and governor of Hudson Bay's Company ) had dissolved Hudson ’ s Bay Trading Company and that the Hudson's Bay Company would now also operate the Lord & Taylor chain.
According to Thomas Edge, an early 17th century whaling captain who was often inaccurate, " William Hudson " discovered the island in 1608 and named it " Hudson's Touches " ( or " Tutches ").
Bylot was first mate on Henry Hudson's ship Discovery, during Hudson's 1610-1611 expedition into what is now known as Hudson Bay.
By 1825 the Hudson's Bay Company started using two brigades, each setting out from opposite ends of the express route — one from Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River and the other from York Factory on Hudson Bay — in spring and passing each other in the middle of the continent.
From 1821 – 1846, the Hudson's Bay Company twice annually used the York Factory Express overland trade route from Fort Vancouver to Hudson Bay then on to London.
From 1670, through the Hudson's Bay Company, the English also laid claim to Hudson Bay, and its drainage basin ( known as Rupert's Land ), and operated fishing settlements in Newfoundland.
Hudson Bay ( Inuktitut: Kangiqsualuk ilua, ), sometimes ( usually historically ) called Hudson's Bay, is a large body of saltwater in northeastern Canada.
Due to a change in naming conventions, Hudson's Bay is now called Hudson Bay.
James Bay is important in the history of Canada as one of the most hospitable parts of the Hudson Bay region ( despite its low human population ), and as a result its corresponding importance to the Hudson's Bay Company and British expansion into Canada.
Significant fur trapping has continued in the region, but in general the east coast or East Main of James Bay was too easily accessed by French and independent traders from the south so early Hudson's Bay Company emphasis was quickly placed onto interior trapping grounds reached from the west coasts of James and Hudson Bays.
This occurred, for example, during Magellan's famous journeys around the world, resulting in the killing of one mutineer, the execution of another and the marooning of others, and on Henry Hudson's Discovery, resulting in Hudson and others being set adrift in a boat.
Grace Hudson's Sun House ; designed by Grace and John Hudson circa 1911 in the American Craftsman | Craftsman style
In 1878, Isaac Hudson moved his family to the uninhabited brush of coastal Pasco County and established a post office at a place he named Hudson's Landing.
West New York is one of North Hudson's communities atop the Hudson Palisades, and home to the highest point in the county.
Rupert's Land, or Prince Rupert's Land, was a territory in British North America, consisting mostly of the Hudson Bay drainage basin that was nominally owned by the Hudson's Bay Company for 200 years from 1670 to 1870, although numerous aboriginal groups lived in the same territory and disputed the sovereignty of the area.

Hudson's and Building
The roots of the College began in 1914 when the Young Building was built as Victoria's first Normal School on part of a seven and a half acre plot belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company.

Hudson's and former
By comparison, the former colony of the United Province of Canada ( divided into the District of Canada East, and the District of Canada West ) and the western provinces were dozens of times larger and in some cases were expanded to take in territory formerly held in British Crown grants to companies such as the Hudson's Bay Company ; in particular the November 19, 1869 sale of Rupert's Land to the Government of Canada under the Rupert's Land Act 1868 was facilitated in part by Maritime taxpayers.
** The British government admits the former Hudson's Bay Company territory of Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory to the Dominion of Canada.
While the Hudson's Bay Company continued to operate out of Fort Vancouver, every year saw less and less fur trade and more and more settlers and U. S. Army warfare against the HBC's former customer base.
The SS Fort Stikine was a 7, 142 gross register ton freighter built in 1942 in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, under a lend-lease agreement, and was named after Fort Stikine, a former outpost of the Hudson's Bay Company located at what is now Wrangell, Alaska.
From Sila Lodge, guided tours were offered, for instance boating tours to the Wager Bay islands, or to Ford Lake across the reversing falls, to the former Hudson's Bay Company outpost, or walks to the surrounding area, where one would find impressive relics of earlier settlements, such as tent rings, qarmaq and Inuksuit, along with relics of the Hudson's Bay Company and Roman Catholic missions.
The former Simpsons headquarters now serve as the headquarters of the Hudson's Bay Company.
The Winnipeg statue was housed in the suburban Polo Park Mall for a few years after 1999, until the Hudson's Bay Company opened a Bay store at that location and wanted the statue of its former competitor removed.
* Fort Taku, also known as Fort Durham and as Taku, a former fort of the Hudson's Bay Company near the mouth of the Taku River
The former Hudson's Bay Company post, Fort Confidence is located on the Dease River which feeds into Dease Arm at the northeast corner.
His mother, Jane, was the daughter of John Work, a prominent Victoria resident, Hudson's Bay Company Chief Factor, and member of the former colony's assembly.
The stadium's design incorporates a six-story former Hudson's warehouse, which was constructed in the 1920s.
They were not the first white settlers there ; a group of French Canadians, former employees of the Hudson's Bay Company, had made their homes in the French Prairie area of the valley.
It was named in 1827 to honour Nicholas Garry, former Deputy Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, who used that part of the land to locate the navigable entrance to the Fraser River.
In 1912 the former farm lands of the Hudson's Bay Company were subdivided to create the Uplands area, but development was hampered by World War I.
After being briefly owned by May Department Stores, the former Hudson's stores were acquired by Federated Department Stores in 2006 and all Marshall Field's stores were incorporated into the Macy's chain.
Through the 1998 acquisition of the global operations of Amoco ( formerly Standard Oil of Indiana ) by British Petroleum, BP Canada acquired the assets of former major Canadian oil and gas companies, which included ' Dome Petroleum ' and ' Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Company '.
The railway's name comes from the former Hudson's Bay Company fort, Fort Shepherd, on bank of the Columbia River on the United States border, even though the spelling is different.
About 1802 the North West Company chartered the heavily-armed Eddystone and placed it under Captain Richards, a former Hudson's Bay Company man and John George McTavish, the younger brother of the Chief of Clan McTavish.
Mr. Patterson died in 2009 by a hit and run by a former Hudson's Bay student.
* Upper Fort Garry, a former Hudson's Bay Company trading post
The construction sites reserved for development by the agreement include the location of the former Statler on Grand Circus Park and the former Hudson's location.

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