voyager [< Cdn F voyageur] DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
THIS ENTRY MAY CONTAIN OUTDATED INFORMATION, TERMS and EXAMPLES
1 n. — Hist.
one of the canoemen or boatmen, usually a French Canadian, Orkneyman, Indian, or Métis, who crewed the vessels of the inland fur trade.
See also: voyageur (def. 1a)
- 1765-75  (1933)  Scars a Voiger but stops hear and Puts a small Sum in the Box.
- 1853  (1955)  Canadian voyagers formed another motley group, with their half Indian dresses, bronzed faces, and flaringly-striped cotton shirts.
- 1965  These [Coureurs de Bois] were a hardy breed of voyagers and woodsmen
2 n.
any traveller of the rivers and trails of the wilderness, especially by canoe.
See also: voyageur (def. 4b)
- 1925  But winter was rapidly closing in upon them and threatening the daring voyagers.
- 1959  . . . Father Le Treste pointed to the small, original mission church that had been built in