* David Thompson, accompanied
by his wife and three children,
spent
time in the upper reaches of the North Saskatchewan
River Valley in June, 1807, before crossing through the "Shining
Mountains" into what now is British Columbia. His sextant reading indicates
they were in the general area of Two O'Clock Creek Flats on
Kootenay
Plains. Thompson's eldest child, Fanny, celebrated her sixth
birthday on
June 10 of that year, while they still were camped
on Kootenay Plains.Fanny was born at Rocky Mountain House.It was not unusual
for Charlotte Small and the children in the early years to accompany Thompson
on many of his travels.
*Source Nordegg Historical society
Athabasca Pass (elev. 1,748 metres) was crossed by David Thompson in 1811, and became thereafter an important route to the Columbia River system. The pass takes its name from the Athabasca River, which rises southeast of the pass; the name in Cree means "where the reeds are," a description of the marshy delta where the river enters Lake Athabasca some 1,000 kilometres away in northeastern Alberta .
At the summit of the pass is a small round lake called Committee Punch Bowl, where Sir George Simpson treated his companions to a bottle of wine in 1825. The name is a tribute to the governing committee of the Hudson's Bay Company.
When crossing Athabaska Pass in January of 1811,
David Thompson discovered that a bag of musket balls was missing. He suspected
that a wolverine had carried the bag off. Search for the bag proved
unavailing. Indeed, the bag was not found for 110 years when in August
of 1921, one of a party of the Interprovincial Boundary Commission found
114 deeply eroded musket balls just north of the summit of the Pass.