FROM 1851 until 1858 Douglas reigned as governor of
Vancouver Island. He did indeed reign. He continued the council of advisers
appointed by Blanshard, the name of Finlayson being added, but his position
was none the less that of an almost undisputed sovereign.
The elements which had proved so discordant under
Blanshard were now in harmony. Crown and company were virtually one, both
having their centre in the governor. If the union wore an ominous look, it
had at least been proved that an independent governor was, under existing
conditions, impossible. For the moment the monopoly was all triumphant.
Colonization came to a standstill. Even the renewal of the grant of the
island for a further term of five years was achieved in 1854 with little
difficulty, notwithstanding the vigorous protests of the few settlers who
still found a voice.
Yet at the moment of its sturdiest growth the axe was
already laid at the root of the tree. Apart from routine, only two incidents
call for special mention during this period. The first of these was
essentially antagonistic in idea to the supremacy of the company; and the
second involved the immediate and utter ruin of the fur trade over a wide
area of the mainland. The events referred to were, respectively, the
establishment of representative government in the colony, and the discovery
of gold on the Fraser River. The present chapter will be divided between
these very important developments.
It was in 1856 that Vancouver Island took on for the
first time the full status of a British colony. The commission issued to
Blanshard had provided for the summoning of a representative assembly; but
for seven years Douglas with his council alone made shift to provide the
scanty legislation which was needed by a community without independent
population. Though the Crown had granted him this privilege, it was by the
Crown that the first doubts were thrown on its validity. In due course it
occurred to the colonial office that the establishment of a legislature on
Vancouver Island was necessary, if for no other purpose than to confirm what
had already been performed without its aid. It was urged, as an additional
reason for the step, that in 1859 the relations of the company with the
Crown must undergo revision, and that the future administration of the
colony would be more easily provided for if the experiment of government by
a house of representatives had been already made. Douglas was accordingly
instructed to arrange forthwith for the dividing of the country into
electoral districts, with a view to the election of a legislature, in
accordance with the terms of his commission. Many practical suggestions as
to the procedure to be followed and the nature of the constitution that
would suit so small a community, were added by Mr. Labouchere, the colonial
secretary of the day.
Consternation was apparently the first emotion raised in
the breast of the company's leader by the determination of the home
authorities. "It is not without feelings of dismay," wrote Douglas in reply,
"that I contemplate the nature and amount of labour and responsibility which
will be imposed upon me in the process of carrying out the instructions
conveyed in your dispatch. Possessing a very slender knowledge of
legislation, without legal advice or intelligent assistance of any kind, I
approach the subject with diffidence, feeling, however, all the
encouragement which the kindly promised assistance and support of Her
Majesty's government is calculated to inspire." Making a virtue of
necessity, he summoned at once a special meeting of his council to consider
the dubious problem that confronted him, the result being that it was
resolved to divide the island into four electoral districts, returning seven
members in all, the property qualification of members to be the ownership of
freehold estate to the value of three hundred pounds or more, while that of
the voters remained as fixed by the governor's commission—namely, twenty
acres or more of freehold land. "There will be a difficulty in finding
properly qualified representatives," wrote Douglas to Labouchere on the
conclusion of these arrangements, "and I fear that our early attempts at
legislation will make a sorry figure, though at all events they will have
the effect you contemplate of removing all doubts as to the validity of our
local enactments."
The proclamation which gave effect to the above was
issued on June 16th, 1856. The four electoral districts into which the
colony had been divided were—Victoria, to be represented by three members ;
Esquimalt, to be represented by two; Nan-aimo, to be represented by one; and
Sooke to be represented by one. Elections duly followed. In Victoria five
candidates appeared ; but in the other constituencies, so few or indifferent
were the electors, the seats went without a contest. The members of the
first assembly were as follows:—J. D. Pemberton, Joseph Yates, and E. E.
Langford for Victoria; Thomas Skinner and J. S. Helmcken for Esquimalt: John
Muir for Sooke and John E. Kennedy for Nanaimo.
The House thus chosen had no sooner met than it
encountered a difficulty that threatened for a time to be insurmountable.
"J. B. Helmcken has been elected Speaker of the House," wrote Douglas under
date of August 20th, "but nothing further has been done in consequence of
objections having been raised as to the validity of the election in one
instance, and as to the property qualifications in two cases, making three
out of the seven members against whom petitions have been sent in, leaving
only three members and the Speaker at liberty to act, and that number is
insufficient to form a committee of inquiry. . . . One of the petitions is
got up merely for party purposes, and if that were withdrawn there would be
four members and the Speaker who might proceed to the affairs of the House.
In the United States the practice is in such cases for the governor to grant
certificates of qualification to a majority of the members, who then proceed
to constitute the House, but I am not certain that such a course would be in
harmony with the English law. However, if the House would appeal to me on
the subject I would have recourse to that expedient." From a later despatch
it appears that the governor was spared such summary action. Langford, the
representative for Victoria, was the member lacking the necessary
qualifications, and he was replaced at once by Joseph William Mackay
unopposed.
The legislature met for the first time on August 12th,
1856. The inaugural speech of the governor on that occasion is a noteworthy
document. Apart from the illustration it offers of what Douglas conceived to
be the status of the young colony, it throws a strong light on the various
problems which beset the early years of the little community. After
congratulating the council and House on the occasion, "an event fraught with
consequences of the utmost importance to the present and future inhabitants,
and remarkable as the first instance of representative institutions being
granted in the infancy of a British colony," the address proceeded :
"The history and actual position of this colony are
marked by many other remarkable circumstances. Called into existence by an
Act of the supreme government, immediately after the discovery of gold in
California, it has maintained an arduous and incessant struggle with the
disorganizing effects on labour of that discovery. Remote from every other
British settlement, with its commerce trammelled, and met by restrictive
duties on every side, its trade and resources remain undeveloped.
Self-supporting, and defraying all the expenses of its own government, it
presents a striking contrast to every other colony in the British Empire,
and like the native pines of its storm-beaten promontories, it has acquired
a slow but hardy growth. Its future progress must, under Providence, in a
great measure depend on the intelligence, industry and enterprise of its
inhabitants, and upon the legislative wisdom of this assembly."
The address paused at this point to refer to the aid and
support which the executive power might in the future expect to derive from
the " local experience and knowledge of the wishes of the people and the
wants of the country," which the members possessed. It then resumed:
"Gentlemen, I am happy to inform you that Her Majesty's
government continues to express the most lively interest in the progress and
welfare of this colony. Negotiations are now pending with the government of
the United States, which may probably terminate in an extension of the
reciprocity treaty to Vancouver Island. To show the commercial advantages
connected with that treaty I will just mention that an import duty of £30 is
levied on every £100 worth of British produce which is now sent to San
Francisco, or to any other American port; or, in other words, the British
proprietor pays as a tax to the United States nearly the value of every
third cargo of fish, timber, or coal which he sends to any American port.
The reciprocity treaty utterly abolishes those fearful imposts, and
establishes a system of free trade in the produce of British colonies. The
effects of that measure in developing the trade and natural resources of the
colony can, therefore, be hardly overestimated. The coal, the timber, and
the productive fisheries of Vancouver's Island will assume a value before
unknown; while every branch of trade will start into activity, and become
the means of pouring wealth into the country. So unbounded is the reliance
which I place in the enterprise and intelligence possessed by the people of
this colony, and in the colony, and in the advantages of their geographical
position, that with equal rights and a fair field I think they may enter
into a successful competition with the people of any other country. The
extension of the reciprocity treaty to this island once gained, the
interests will become inseparably connected with the principles of free
trade, a system which I think it will be sound policy on our part to
encourage.
"Gentlemen, the colony has been again visited this year
by a large party of northern Indians, and their presence has excited in our
minds a not unreasonable degree of alarm. Through the blessing of God they
have kept from committing acts of open violence, and been quiet and orderly
in their deportment; yet the presence of large bodies of armed savages, who
have never felt the restraining influences of moral and religious training,
and who are accustomed to follow the impulses of their own evil natures more
than the dictation of reason or justice, gives rise to a feeling of
insecurity which must exist as long as the colony remains without military
protection. Her Majesty's government, ever alive to the dangers which beset
the colony, have arranged with the lords commissioners of the Admiralty,
that the President frigate should be sent to Vancouver's Island ; and
the measure will, I have no doubt, be carried into effect without delay. I
shall nevertheless continue to conciliate the goodwill of the native Indian
tribes by treating them with justice and forbearance, and by rigidly
protecting their civil and agrarian rights. Many cogent reasons of humanity
and sound policy recommend that course to our attention; and I shall,
therefore, rely upon your support in carrying such measures into effect. We
know, from our own experience, that
the friendship of the natives is at all times useful, while it is no less
certain that their enmity may become more disastrous than any other calamity
to which the colony is directly exposed.
"Gentlemen of the House of Assembly,
according to the constitutional usage, with you must originate all money
bills; it is therefore your special province to consider the ways and means
of defraying the ordinary expenses of the government, either by levying a
customs duty on imports, or by a system of direct taxation. The poverty of
the country and the limited means of a population struggling against the
pressure of numberless privations, must necessarily restrict the amount of
taxation; it should, therefore, be our constant study to regulate the public
expenditure according to the means of the country, and to live strictly
within our income. The common error of running into speculative improvements
entailing debts upon the colony, for a very uncertain advantage, should be
carefully avoided. The demands upon the public revenue will, at present,
chiefly arise from the improvement of the internal communications of the
country, and providing for the education of the young, the erection of
places for public worship, the defence of the country, and the
administration of justice.
"Gentlemen, I feel in all its force the
responsibility now resting upon us. The interests and well being of
thousands yet unborn may be affected by our decisions, and they will
reverence or condemn our acts according as they are found to influence, for
good or for evil, the events of the future."
With this exordium, the legislature proceeded to its
duties. The opening session was almost wholly devoted to the consideration
of ways and means. It would appear on the whole to have been no small
problem to make ends meet in the young colony. In 1855, for example, the
total public expenditures reached the sum of £4,107 2s. 3d., of which £1,388
5s. 5d. were spent on roads and bridges; £683 18s. 1d. on surveys; £1,362
17s. 5d. on the church, chaplain and parsonage at Victoria; £100 on the
administration of justice; £81 8s. 9d. on militia; £30 9s. 2d. on jail
expenses; and £7 15s. 10d. on government premises. To meet this, an income
of £334 17s. was derived from land sales, and the sum of £340 from the sale
of licenses to deal in liquor, these being the sole local sources of
revenue. The sum of £130 was voted to meet the expenses of the first House.
This modest appropriation, it is of interest to note in the records,
permitted the payment of £10 to the clerk of the House; £5 to the
sergeant-at-arms; £20 for lighting, heating and furnishing; £50 for the
copying of documents; £5 for stationery; while the remaining £40 were
prudently withheld for current salaries.
Apart from this incursion into finance, little of an
original nature was attempted by the assembly. Of its acts of ratification,
the most important was that by which the rules of the Supreme Court, as
previously in force for the administration of justice in civil cases, were
continued without alteration. This done, the House lapsed into inactivity.
In reality there was nothing for it to do. It introduced no new element into
the government of the colony. It was not even representative of anything but
the all pervading interests of the company. Douglas, the governor, was the
company's factor-in-chief. Work, Finlayson and Tod, who made up the council,
were respectively chief factor, chief trader and ancient pensioner of the
company. The seven members of the House were no less of the monopoly.
Helmcken, the Speaker, was the company's staff doctor; Pemberton was its
surveyor-general; and Mackay was its clerk. Muir and Kennedy were retired
servants. Yates was its beneficiary; and Skinner was an agent of the Puget
Sound Company. Cameron, the chief-justice, was the brother-in-law of Douglas
; Anderson, the collector of duties, was a retired chief-trader. For the
real history of the island, therefore, during the period of representative
institutions as before, it is from the archives of the Hudson's Bay Company
that enquiry must be made. The acts of Douglas as governor and his official
despatches to the colonial office are well known; of Douglas as chief factor
and the communications which he held with the London directorate—the hidden
springs to which the outside show responded—we have but occasional glimpses
or such stray particles of fact as may be gleaned by inference or from alien
sources.
Thus, without incident or variation, the government of
Vancouver Island continued until 1859, when the end came of the second five
years' term of the Hudson's Bay Company's rule. In truth, the administration
of the colony, as apart from the company, had proved a matter of small
difficulty. There was but one constable. As no means were provided for
paying a recorder or other administrator of justice, the governor himself
had acted in that capacity. In the place of sheriffs and a militia. a body
of mounted police termed "voltigeurs" was organized from among the
settlers and servants of the company. On only two occasions was a display of
force found necessary. In December 1852, a shepherd at Christmas Hill was
killed by two natives, one of whom fled to Cowichan and the other to
Nanaimo. To allay the settlers' alarm, Douglas with a contingent borrowed
from H.M.S. Thetis, then lying at Esquimalt, proceeded to the Saanich
village, where after a characteristic parley the murderer was handed over.
The expedition then passed to Nanaimo and secured the second culprit. At
both places the natives were sternly admonished. On the return to Victoria
the criminals were tried and executed. Some time later a white man was shot
by an Indian at Cowichan, but the offender was again delivered up, after a
demonstration as before, and was hanged in the presence of his people. Thus
was the Indian taught to respect the white man's law.
The disruption of this curious fabric was in the . end as
sudden as it was complete. No other agency, it may be safely said, than that
which brought the result to pass, could have achieved it with the same
unexpectedness and finality. That agency was the discovery of placer gold.
The incident belongs to more than local history, the opening of the gold
fields of British Columbia being among the most notable of those dazzling
events which have fluttered from time to time the financial capitals of the
world and opened new paths for the adventurous to sudden and marvellous
wealth.
As early as the regime of Blanshard, rumours of the
finding of gold had reached Victoria from the Queen Charlotte Islands. More
in alarm than gratification at the news, a brigantine had been despatched by
the company to investigate. It discovered quartz but no placers. In the
following year, however, expeditions from various quarters landed on the
islands; and on January 14th, 1852, Douglas was able to report the definite
discovery of gold on the western coast. It appeared strongly advisable to
the governor at this juncture to prohibit foreigners from landing on the new
gold fields. Several vessels, he pointed out to the colonial secretary, had
sailed from the United States, and more were being outfitted on the
California sea-board, the crews being prepared to overcome opposition by
their numbers and the ease with which reinforcements of adventurers might be
obtained from San Francisco. Attention was also called to the hostile
attitude of the Indians. The Admiralty in reply ordered H.M.S. Thetis
to assert Her Majesty's sovereignty over the islands; but it was decided not
to prohibit the vessels of foreign countries from landing men and stores
there. In May of the same year, Douglas accordingly thought it advisable to
report more fully on the matter. Seven American ships, he informed Earl
Grey, with between forty and seventy men each, had arrived in Gold Harbour,
four having returned after landing fifteen men and erecting a blockhouse.
"It is very certain," he added, "that success will have the effect of
attracting crowds of adventurers from the American settlements to the Queen
Charlotte Islands, and it will be no easy task to eject them when firmly
established." The admission of foreigners to the gold fields of British
Columbia was from first to last, as will be seen, the cause of much
disquietude to the governor.
These and other representations bore fruit at the close
of the year, when Douglas received a commission as lieutenant-governor of
the Queen Charlotte Islands—"to meet the circumstances of the time." Power
was by the same instrument granted him to issue licenses, on the express
understanding that they did not give a title in the soil He was requested
also to forward the names of persons who might act as justices of the peace.
Enclosed with the despatch which bore these orders were copies of letters
which had been issued instructing the Admiralty to protect British property
and interests from foreign violation and calling the attention of the United
States government to the actions of its citizens on the Pacific. Douglas, on
their receipt, at once drew up a proclamation with regard to the taking out
of licenses, the conditions which he attached to the latter being similar to
those enforced in New South Wales, the most important difference lying in
the fact that the fee in the Queen Charlotte Islands was placed at ten
instead of twenty shillings.
In the excitement which followed these developments, a
number of expeditions made haste to the islands. Five vessels were reported
in Mitchell Harbour at one time; and the hills were full of prospectors. The
end, however, was disappointment. One quartz vein, seven inches in width and
traceable for eight feet, contained in places twenty-five per cent, of gold;
but the hope of loading vessels with the treasure was soon abandoned. From a
pocket on Gold Harbour, Moresby Island, between $20,000 and $25,000 were
taken (or were reported to have been taken) but more was probably spent in
the mining of it than was finally recovered. About the same time Indians
from the Skeena River brought in nuggets to the company's fort, but the
several expeditions that were sent out to locate the sources met with
failure. The whole movement died almost as suddenly as it began.
The flurry with regard to the Queen Charlotte Islands
serves but as introductory episode in the history proper of the gold fields
of British Columbia. These, as is well known to fame, lay on the mainland,
in the beds of the Fraser and Thompson Rivers, from whose golden sands
millions of dollars worth of the precious metal was washed annually for many
succeeding years. Exactly how, when, or where the finds were first made is
uncertain, amid the mass of legend offering on the subject. Gold dust,
according to one report, had been seen by the company in the possession of
the natives at Kamloops as early as 1852, though no suspicion was awakened
at the time as to the wealth of the neighbourhood. Gold, according to a
letter of Douglas written in 1860, was first discovered on the Thompson
River by an Indian a short distance below Nicommen. Quaffing from the
stream, he saw a shining pebble: it proved to be gold. Finlayson mentions
the discoveries of McLean, the officer in charge at Kamloops, as among the
earliest incidents of the gold-mining epoch. According to Anderson, the
first intimation that the company received of the existence of gold in the
interior was in 1855, when some particles of the metal were found by a
servant of the company who was idly washing a pannikin of gravel near Fort
Colville. The result was the opening of diggings close by, which proved only
moderately remunerative. Later, in a version of the story which accounts for
the spread of the news, some Canadians went over from Colville to the
Thompson and Fraser, found gold everywhere, were followed by others, who in
turn sent the reports over Puget Sound to San Francisco. In less than a year
after, twenty thousand miners were on their way to the Fraser.
The first official mention of the discoveries was made by
Douglas to the home government in a despatch dated April 16th, 1856. This
had reference to the finds on the Upper Columbia. That they were not
seriously regarded is shown by the fact that the subject was permitted to
rest until July 1857. In the latter year, it appears, the Indians had
expelled some parties of gold-seekers from this region, partly from a desire
to retain the gold, and partly because they feared that the operations of
the gold-diggers would prevent the salmon from ascending the river. Later in
the same year, however, Douglas in a letter to Labouchere speaks of the
Couteau mines, so named from the natives of the Thompson and Shushwap
countries, as attracting attention, though up to October 6th, 1857, only
three hundred ounces of gold had been exported through the agency of the
company. Nevertheless, on the same date as his letter, Douglas issued a
proclamation declaring all gold in its natural place of deposit to belong to
the Crown and that persons might not "dig or disturb the soil in search of
gold until authorized in that behalf by Her Majesty's colonial government."
The authorization in question was to be obtained by payment of a license of
10s. a month, Douglas excusing his action in the matter by the fact that he
was invested with command over the district by the Hudson's Bay Company, and
that he was the only representative of the Crown within reach. The cost of
these licenses was raised to 21s. before the end of the following January.
The immediate result of the policy of causing the miners
to pay tribute in this manner was to bring them one and all to Victoria as
the starting-point for the new diggings. Coming as they did from California
by sea, Victoria was naturally the first point of call; had no license been
required, however, they might have gone through direct to the Fraser. Though
the effect upon a number was merely to cause a break in the journey, upon
others, owing to transportation difficulties, a longer stay was
necessitated. During the spring and summer months of 1858, the rush was
extraordinary. Ocean steamers crowded with gold-seekers arrived almost
daily. From a hamlet clustered about a Hudson's Bay trading-post, Victoria
sprang suddenly into a city. No accurate record of arrivals was kept; but it
has been estimated that between twenty thousand and twenty-five thousand
persons passed through its portals. Every trade, nationality and condition
was represented in that throng. From the Oregon coast to San Francisco, men
dropped the instruments of their calling, hastily sold what could most
readily be converted into cash, left homes uncared for, and boarded the
first nondescript carrier whose prow turned northward. Some who avoided the
passage by sea followed the coast by land, or attempted to reach the goal
through the mountain passes of the interior. The gambler and the parasite
followed in their wake. California's population was seriously depleted ; San
Francisco was threatened with bankruptcy. In Victoria the sound of the
hammer was incessant day and night. Buildings to the number of two hundred
and upward arose in six weeks. The land office was besieged before daylight.
There was all but a food famine. Flour rose to $30.00 a barrel; ship biscuit
was not to be had; lumber brought §100 a thousand feet; town lots sold at
$1,000 per foot frontage. Victoria became immediately the most important
shipping centre of the coast, and its docks were crowded with merchandise.
Of the promiscuous population that continued to pour in, many remained in
the city. Those in search of gold pressed on to the Fraser,—in canoes, in
improvised sailing boats or in steamers, daunted by no dangers and enduring
the severest hardships. Many were lost in the tide-rips, and of those that
reached the great river thousands were doomed to disappointment. The Fraser
begins to rise in June, and does not reach its ebb until the autumn. High
water covers the bars and renders placer mining impossible. Some of the more
indomitable pushed on at the risk of life to Hope and Yale, the head of
navigation. The great majority, however, turned their backs on British
Columbia and repaired again to San Francisco. Those who remained met with
their reward. When the Fraser fell, the harvest was rich. Some $543,000 in
gold was shipped out in that year alone, and it is estimated that the total
output was from $150,000 to $200,000 greater than .that amount.
The invasion of this wild and lawless multitude presented
a serious problem to Douglas, badly equipped as he was for maintaining order
and enforcing the authority of his government. On May 8th, 1858, he gives
voice again in a despatch to the fear which had so beset him at the time of
the gold discoveries on the Queen Charlotte Islands—the fear of the
foreigner who knew not the company. He admits the openings for trade
presented by the inrush, as well as the practical impossibility of stemming
so fierce a tide; yet he cannot refrain, notwithstanding the peremptory
mandate of Lytton that it was no part of British policy to exclude
foreigners from the gold fields, from casting about for means of regulation
and profit other than those that went hand in hand with a policy of
unrestriction. One plan which he ventured to suggest as asserting the
interest of the Crown at the same time that it assured a revenue to the
company, involved an arrangement with the United States Pacific Mail Company
whereby the Hudson's Bay Company would enjoy a monopoly of the trade on the
Fraser River and receive a compensation of two dollars per capita for each
passenger carried to the head of navigation, the steamers to accept no
passengers but those who had paid for licenses from the government of
Vancouver Island. The arrangement was to continue for one year. Lord Lytton,
however, promptly disapproved of the conditions as too favourable to the
company, and as a matter of fact, the arrangement was never more than a
project within the mind.
Shortly after the beginning of the influx Douglas made a
trip in person to the mainland, ascending the Fraser to Forts Langley, Hope
and Yale. At Langley a number of speculators had taken possession of the
land and were staking lots for sale; unlicensed and contraband trading had
also sprung up. These matters were speedily righted. At Fort Hope, the
miners, prior to his arrival, had organized a form of government and had
posted regulations. These were replaced by rules proclaimed in the name of
the governor of Vancouver Island.
An incident is related of this trip which brings into
prominence the practical wisdom of the governor. Landing at Hill's Bar, he
inquired concerning the presence of a British subject, with a view to the
appointment of a justice of the peace. The one man indicated to him
confessed to a lack of knowledge of the law, and recommended a versatile and
well-known foreigner to the governor's attention. Impressed by the man's
candour, Douglas declared that if he knew the difference between right and
wrong his qualifications were sufficient, and he was forthwith appointed to
administer the law.
In June, Douglas in a despatch to Lord Stanley gave a
detailed account of this journey. "Evidence is obtained," he wrote, "of the
existence of gold over a vast extent of country situated both north and
south of the Fraser River, and the conviction is gradually forcing itself on
my mind that not only the Fraser River and its tributary streams, but the
whole country situated to the eastward of the Gulf of Georgia, as far north
as Johnstone's Straits, is one continued bed of gold, of incalculable value
and extent." In view of this, he proposed that the land be thrown open for
settlement, and that it be surveyed and sold at a rate not to exceed 20s. an
acre. He pointed out, at the same time, that compensation would have to be
made to the Hudson's Bay Company for giving up their rights of exclusive
trade.
It was in reply to this communication that Douglas
received intelligence of a decision on the part of the home government
fraught with important consequences to himself and the country. Mention has
been made before of the proceedings of that select committee of inquiry
which placed so unfavourable a report regarding the Hudson's Bay Company
before the British parliament of 1858. In Canada a similar investigation had
been made with a like result. This and the discovery of gold on the Fraser
River had convinced the government of the need of radical change, west as
well as east of the Rockies. On August 2nd, 1858, accordingly, an Act was
passed providing for the government of the mainland of British America, from
the 49th parallel northward to the Naas and the Finlay, and from the crest
of the Rocky Mountains westward to the sea, including the Queen Charlotte
and adjacent islands with the exception of Vancouver Island. One month
later, the license of exclusive trade granted to the Hudson's Bay Company
for twenty-one years from 1838, in so far as it covered the territory above
defined, was revoked, the government re-purchasing the company's rights on
Vancouver Island for £57,500. Of British Columbia (for by that name it was
decided that the new colony on the mainland should be known) it was proposed
that Douglas should be governor, the office to be held in conjunction with
his present post in Vancouver Island. The condition was added that he should
sever all connection with the Hudson's Bay and Puget Sound Companies. The
additional salary offered was at first £1,000. Douglas expressed
appreciation of the honour and accepted the conditions. "With the consent of
the Hudson's Bay Company," he wrote, "I place my humble services
unhesitatingly at the disposal of Her Majesty's government, and I will take
early measures for withdrawing from the company and disposing of my Puget
Sound stock, trusting that the allowance as to salary from Her Majesty's
government will be adequate to my support in a manner worthy of the position
I am called upon to fill." The allowance, in Douglas's opinion, ought to
have been £5,000, his fortune having been impaired by his almost unrequited
tenure of office in Vancouver Island. The colonial secretary, however, did
not feel justified in assigning a larger sum than £1,800 at the time, though
it was intimated that an increase derived from local funds would not be
opposed if the revenue should warrant it.
Thus ended the long connection of the famous chief factor
and the company. Thus also died the exclusive rights of the great monopoly
in the territory west of the Rocky Mountains. Douglas belongs henceforth to
the public life of the country, and to that alone; while the company takes
its place in the ranks of private trading enterprises, still powerful, and
with a unique part still to play in the upbuilding of the country, but on no
other basis than that of equal privilege. |