Moose Lake (Alberta)
Moose Lake is a relatively small lake in north-eastern Alberta, Canada, located a few kilometres west of the town of Bonnyville. It is fed by the Mooselake River and drains north into the Beaver River.
There is another body of water named Moose Lake, 65 km NW of Fort McKay.
Name
Moose Lake was known to early French-Canadian fur traders as lac d'Orignal, which translates as Moose Lake. This in turn may have been a direct translation of its Cree name of the same meaning, mōswa sākahikan.History
Around 1768 William Pink passed the mouth of the Mooselake River. In 1789 Angus Shaw of the North West Company built a post on the northwest shore of the lake called or Shaw House. It was close to where the Mooselake River enters Franchere Bay. The river was so shallow that canoes were taken up the river empty and goods portaged overland. It was in good beaver country and within easy reach of Fort George to the south on the North Saskatchewan. Buffalo pemmican was carried north to the lake and then via the Beaver River to Lac Île-à-la-Crosse to feed the voyageurs on their long journey to Lake Athabasca.In the 1792–93 season Moose Lake produced 64 of the 392 total packs of beaver produced by the Churchill River Department. In 1798 David Thompson reached the lake from Fort George.