Sarah Lonsdale
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Mina
Northern Labrador, 1905
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When Mina Hubbard’s husband Leonidas died while attempting to map the route of the Naskaupi River in northern Labrador in 1903, his widow, Mina, decided to try to finish his work. In the summer of 1905 she set off, with four Native American and mixed-race guides, in two canoes, starting at the North West River trading post. As a woman her presence in the Labrador ‘wild’ was highly contested and the New York ‘outdoors’ magazines criticised her and questioned her motives. Her private diary of her journey reveals the peaceful delight she found in the wilderness, removed from the expectations and restrictions of so-called ‘civilised’ society.

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