Of particular note is the method employed by local Inuit to harvest
mussels in winter. As the tide ebbs in shallow areas, they pierce holes in the sea ice. With the water
having receded, they drop themselves through these holes and are able to crawl under the ice to collect
this succulent seafood delicacy.
In 1884, members of the Canadian Hudson's Bay Expedition, aboard the steamship Neptune, arrived in the
area anxious to establish a commercial route to Europe through the Hudson Strait. An ice observation and
meteorological station were built at Stupart Bay (known as Aniuvarjuaq by the Inuit). Inuit began to
trade frequently with observers posted at the station: seal-skin mitts and boots for tobacco and gun
powder.
Wakeham Bay takes its name from Captain William Wakeham who, in 1897, lead an expedition to determine
whether the Hudson Strait was safe for navigation. In 1961, the provincial government renamed the
settlement Sainte-Anne-de-Maricourt, until with the establishment of a municipality it officially
readopted its Inuktitut name, Kangiqsujuaq.
In 1910, the French company Révillon Frères established a post at Kangiqsujuaq. Four years later,
the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) followed suit. In 1928, the HBC established an experimental fox farm
which it operated for 12 years. In 1936, the Révillon Frères trading post was closed, but a Catholic
mission was established. Many Oblate priests have lived at the mission, among them, Father Dion since
1964. In 1960, the first school was opened, followed the next year by a nursing station.
An Anglican church was established in 1963. Kangiqsujuammiut established their co-operative store in 1970.
Kangiqsujuaq is located north of the Cape Smith belt, an area rich in mineralization. Since the 1950s,
exploitation has been carried out irregularly. Through the 1970s and 80s, asbestos was mined at Purtuniq.
Today, a copper and nickel mine is operated by the Société minière Raglan du Québec in the area.
Roughly 15% of this mine's workforce is drawn from Nunavik communities.
(This information was obtained from the Nunavik Tourism Association Web Site; www.nunavik-tourism.com)