IN an extended series of despatches addressed to Douglas,
bearing date July and August 1858, Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, the colonial
secretary, set forth, amid a wealth of comment, the principles by which,
under the watchful tutelage of the home government, the early steps of the
province of British Columbia were to be guided. These formed at once the
constitution and the Magna Charta of the new community. They occupy from
many points of view a remarkable place in the history of the colonial
institutions of Great Britain.
The main feature of the plan was that it placed the
entire functions both of government and legislation in the hands of Douglas.
A check was indeed provided in the form of a council, which the governor was
recommended to select as soon as possible, and to which foreigners as well
as British subjects might be eligible. It was also declared with emphasis
that the colony was expected to adopt representative institutions at the
earliest moment practicable. But the effect of these provisions was less
real than apparent. The council was purely advisory; and the remoteness of
the time when the chaotic population of the mainland might be capable of
political organization served but to emphasize the extraordinary powers that
were entrusted meanwhile to the governor.
Ways and means were perhaps the second matter to receive
attention. It was thought that the exceptional resources of the country,
including as they did not only fertile lands (the leading element of
success, as Great Britain held, in all colonial settlements), a magnificent
system of harbours and waterways, and that wealth in precious mineral which
was even now attracting immigrants on so unprecedented a scale, would soon
provide a revenue. Moderate duties on beer, wine, spirits, and the other
articles usually subject to such taxation, as well as the sale of
lands,—especially town lots for which high prices might be demanded,—were
regarded at the outset as preferable to any system of mining licenses. The
latter, however, were not forbidden, the colonial secretary contenting
himself with a reference to the experience of Australia, which had not been
happy in this method of applying the principles of direct taxation.
Other provisions were of a miscellaneous character. The
establishment of a seaport town and of a seat of government were suggested.
It was promised that a party of Royal Engineers would be sent from England
to survey lands for settlement (the disposal of which should be by gradual
process), to open roads and to choose sites for the cities above mentioned.
An experienced officer was to be furnished to assist in the formation of an
adequate police force. A collector of customs and a judge were also
promised. Arrangements for the transmission of mails via Panama and the
levying of postage were authorized. In general, it was provided that the
country in various directions should be developed, as soon as full reports
concerning its resources could be prepared by the governor or his
assistants. Every care was enjoined upon the governor not to antagonize or
irritate the mixed population now swarming into the country. Especially was
there to be no jealousy of or discrimination against foreigners, who were to
be convinced in every legitimate way that their interests would be protected
by the government. Kindness towards the Indians was commanded. Other
instructions had reference to the discouragement of speculation, the
granting of naturalization, and the making of appointments with a view both
to efficiency and the satisfaction of local feeling.
The bearing of the new arrangement upon the status of the
Hudson's Bay Company, hitherto sole overlord of the whole vast region, had
been sufficiently indicated by the measure which revoked the special
privileges granted in 1838, 1849, and 1854. Nevertheless it was thought
advisable, in view of the recent past, to remind the governor with some
particularity that at no time had these privileges gone further than to
guarantee exclusive trade with the Indians of the Fraser River. Even before
the establishment of the colony, the company, it was pointed out, had no
right to exclude strangers; it had no rights of government or of occupation
of the soil; it had no right to prevent or interfere with any kind of
trading, except with the Indians alone. The British government, however,
went even further in its watchfulness than this explicit definition. "You
will pardon me if I enjoin on you as imperative," wrote the colonial
secretary to Douglas, "the most diligent care that in the sales of land
there should not be the slightest cause to impute a desire to show favour to
the servants of the Hudson's Bay Company. Parliament will watch with
jealousy every proceeding connected with such sales ; and I shall rely upon
you to take every precaution which not only impartial probity but deliberate
prudence can suggest, that there shall be no handle given for a charge, I
will not say of favour, but of indifference or apathy to the various kinds
of land-jobbing, either to benefit favoured individuals or to cheat the land
revenue, which are of so frequent occurrence at the outset of colonization,
and which it is the duty of Her Majesty's government, so far as lies in
them, to repress."
The man upon whom the weight of these important and
manifold counsels was laid had at least the entire confidence of the home
government. "I cannot conclude," wrote the colonial secretary at the close
of one of his despatches, "without a cordial expression of my sympathy in
the difficulties you have encountered and of my sense of the ability, the
readiness of resource, the wise and manly temper of conciliation which you
have so signally displayed; and I doubt not that you will continue to show
the same vigour and discretion in its exercise; and you may rely with
confidence upon whatever support and aid Her Majesty's government can afford
you." And again with more particular reference to the future and to the
responsibilities entrusted to him in this extraordinary manner: "These
powers are indeed of very serious and unusual extent, but Her Majesty's
government fully rely on your moderation and discretion. You are aware that
they have only been granted on account of the very unusual circumstances
which have called into being the colony committed to your charge, and which
may for some time continue to characterize it. To use them, except for the
most necessary purpose, would be, in truth, to abuse them greatly. They are
required for the maintenance of British law and British habits of order, and
for regulating the special questions to which the conditions of employment
and of the population may give birth."
To attempt, within ordinary limits, to describe the
somewhat elastic manner in which application was made of the comprehensive
scheme outlined above, is to be plunged at once into a mass of incident,
each phase of which has both its own and its reflected importance, but the
heterogeneous nature of which renders the topical method difficult. The
government of which Douglas formed the embodiment was in effect a means by
which difficulties might be met by competent authority as they arose. It was
not expected to attain at once to system, where even precedent had to be
created. For this reason it will be well to follow somewhat closely for a
time the movements of the governor himself as he proceeded to the execution
of his difficult task. But first a word is needed as to the men and the
material which were placed at his disposal, and the general nature of the
problem involved in the first attempt at government in British Columbia.
To the command of the Royal Engineers, the promise of
which had been the most stirring note of cheer in the despatches of the home
government and a detachment of which was on its way to British Columbia
within a few weeks, Colonel Richard Clement Moody had been appointed. He
bore, in addition, the title of chief commissioner of lands and works, with
a latent commission as lieutenant-governor of the colony, in case of the
incapacity or absence of Douglas. That there might be no misunderstanding as
to the nature of his office and its relation to that of the governor, his
instructions were to an unusual degree explicit. The governor, it was
explained, was the supreme authority in the colony and his orders were to
prevail as to the spots at which all surveys and other public works should
be carried out. At the same time the duties of the commissioner were to be
regarded as special and not to be interfered with except under circumstances
of the greatest gravity. The raising of a revenue from land sales being of
immediate importance, the commissioner was urged to afford the governor,
without shackling the latter's discretion, the benefit of his talents and
experience in ensuring this paramount object. Full reports were to be made
from time to time of the various resources of the colony—its mines, its
fisheries, the qualities of its coal, the nature of its soil, and its
maritime approaches—with a view to the immediate development of the social
and industrial welfare of the community. With regard to the military
employment of his force, the utmost discretion was to be used. "No
soldiers," wrote the colonial secretary to Moody, "are likely to be more
popular then the Royal Engineers, partly, let me hope, from their military
discipline and good conduct, and partly from the civil nature of their
duties in clearing the headway for civilization. Thus, if not ostentatiously
setting forth its purely military character, the force at your command will,
nevertheless, when the occasion may need its demonstration, do its duty as
soldiers no less than as surveyors.......Wherever England extends her
sceptre, there as against the foreign enemy she pledges the defence of her
sword. It seems meanwhile" he continued, "a good augury of the cooperation
of the colonists in any measure demanding public spirit, that the miners
themselves are constructing a road, of which seven miles are
completed, and that they have organized themselves into bands under leaders,
thus recognizing discipline as the element of success in all combined
undertakings. Each miner thus. employed deposits with the governor $25 as
security for good conduct. I need not add that a governor who could at once
inspire confidence and animate exertion must have many high qualities which
will ensure your esteem and add to the satisfaction with which you will
cooperate with his efforts."
The first contingent of the force, consisting of twenty
non-commissioned officers and men, left England by the steamer La Plata
on September 2nd, arriving at Victoria in November. A second followed
soon. In a third party, which sailed by the clipper-ship Thames City
around the Horn, were included three officers, a staff assistant surgeon,
one hundred and eighteen non-commissioned officers and men, together with
thirty-one women and thirty-four children, the whole in charge of Captain B.
H. Luard. Moody arrived in December. The La Plata among its
despatches to Douglas bore three of special importance: the first including
his commission as governor of British Columbia; a second empowering him to
make provision for the administration of justice; and a third informing him
of the revocation of the charter to the Hudson's Bay Company of 1838 with
reference to territory on the mainland west of the Rocky Mountains.
Another appointment of the time, fraught with even
greater importance to the colony, was that of Matthew Baillie Begbie as
judge of British Columbia. He arrived in November 1858. Though the office,
strictly speaking, was judicial, he was instructed for the present to lend
his assistance in the framing of laws and other legal business more properly
pertaining to the functions of an attorney-general, the first incumbent of
that office, Mr. G. H. Carey, not being appointed until some time later.
Until his death in 1894, Begbie continued from sheer force of character as
well as of intellect to fill a unique and commanding place in the affairs of
British Columbia. Born in Edinburgh in 1819, and educated at Cambridge and
Lincoln's Inn, he succeeded to the office of chief-justice of the united
colonies of British Columbia and Vancouver Island in 1866, Needham, the
chief-justice of the latter, who had followed Cameron in 1858, having been
transferred to Trinidad. To Begbie, perhaps more than any other man, the
colony owed the healthful ordinances, the liberal provisions of government,
and the unbroken reign of peace and order which it enjoyed almost from the
moment of its birth. There will be occasion on a later page to notice at
least one example of the practical statesmanship of this remarkable man.
W. Wymond Hanley was appointed collector of customs and
Chartres Brew, who had served with distinction in the Crimea, chief of the
constabulary. Travaillot and Hicks were nominated assistant commissioners of
Crown lands at Thompson River and Yale, and W. H. Bevis, revenue officer at
Langley. The colonial secretary was W. A. G. Young, and the
treasurer, W. D. Gosset. James D. Pemberton, the surveyor-general of
Vancouver Island, acted for a time in the same capacity in British Columbia,
with B. W. Pearse as his first assistant. By October 27th, 1858, it may be
remarked, the governor was able to forward a report from Pemberton on the
important subject of the disposal of Crown lands which included a proposal
to use the 49th parallel as a base in all surveys, with a suggestion that
mineral lands should be held at £1 per acre, town sites according to the
value of location, and agricultural lands at considerably less.
On the subject of officers, in general, Douglas was under
instructions to make his selections, where possible, in England, it being
regarded as of "great importance to the general social welfare and dignity
of the colony that gentlemen should be encouraged to come from this kingdom,
not as mere adventurers seeking employment but in the hope of obtaining
professional occupations for which they are calculated; such for instance as
stipendiary magistrates, or gold commissioners." A warning was again added
against favouritism to the employees of the Hudson's Bay Company, and it was
again declared that for the avoidance of all appearance of local preference
"careful appointments should be made in England." Up to June 30th, 1859,
Douglas had recommended the following officers, among others, in British
Columbia, nearly every name in the list having since passed into the history
of the community: W. R. Spalding, as stipendiary magistrate and justice of
the peace at Queenborough; Peter O'Reilly, Thomas Elwyn and H. M. Ball to
the same offices at Langley, Lillooet and Lytton, respectively; Charles S.
Nicoll, to be high sheriff at Port Douglas; E. H. Sanders, as assistant gold
commissioner at Fort Yale; Charles Good, as chief clerk in the colonial
secretary's office; John Cooper, as chief clerk of the treasury; W. H.
McCrea, as clerk in the Custom House; A. I. Bushby, to be registrar of the
Supreme Court; Charles Wylde, as revenue officer at Langley. In addition
there were resident at New Westminster, W. D. Gosset, treasurer; F. G.
Claudet, assayer; and C. A. Bacon, melter. In later years the number of
applicants for office coming from Great Britain, often with influential
letters of introduction, was a source of no small embarrassment to Douglas.
It was indeed an extraordinary community to which the
offices of government were now to be extended. Scattered along the reaches
of the lower Fraser or clambering in widely scattered bands over the
mountainous divides in search of further fields, not less than thirty
thousand miners had rushed into the district,—of a class, the most unbridled
in the world. Of these, however, scarcely more than four thousand were left
at the end of the summer season, the difficulties of the high water and of
the terrific rapids and canyons of the Fraser having driven out the rest.
Another influx occurred in October, but it was of small account compared
with the first. The bars began a few miles above Hope, and on the thirteen
which lay between that point and Yale two or three thousand men were digging
in the sands. At Yale there was another seven or eight hundred. Tents and
log huts provided shelter. Provisions, once the first rush was over, were
fairly abundant at these lower points. Bacon, salmon, bread, tea and coffee
formed the staple diet; and a good meal could be bought for one dollar. Milk
and butter were unknown. High spirits prevailed save among the few whom the
unaccustomed hardships and deprivations were slowly grinding to death. On
the whole, though the camps held many a wild and abandoned character, acts
of lawlessness were singularly infrequent; but the mass was as a smouldering
fire ready to burst into a flame of revolt on provocation of its untamed
sense of justice. Above Yale a different story was told. Ingress barred by
the tremendous "lower big canyon" and "upper big canyon" of the Fraser, and
by the increasing savagery of the natives, only the most reckless and
determined had forced their way thither. Still higher, on the Thompson, a
few who had crossed from the Upper Columbia by the old trail of the Hudson's
Bay Company, were fighting slow starvation in the absence of stores and the
possibility of bringing in supplies. With the exception of the scattered and
demoralized fur traders and the outraged and exasperated Indians, such in
1858 was the colony of British Columbia.
During his tenure of the double office, Douglas was of
necessity an itinerant governor of the mainland colony, and in the record of
his several visits, set forth in ample detail in the reports which he
forwarded to the colonial office, a large part of the early history of
British Columbia is to be read. The first of these visits has been already
mentioned. The second was undertaken in the September following his
appointment as governor. A force of marines from H.M.S. Satellite,
then acting as guard ship in British Columbia waters, made ready to
accompany him, in view of recent troubles with the Indians; it does not
appear, however, that the contingent was made use of. The first place of
call was Fort Hope, the station at which the detachment of engineers not yet
arrived were to be set at work, and from which a road to Yale was urgently
needed. Some three thousand miners and traders were huddled at the time
about the stockade in tents or huts. Provisions were scarce and dear, pork
and flour selling at one dollar a pound. Bad blood between the Indians and
the whites had been aroused, the improper sale of liquor being probably the
chief cause. Realizing the impossibility of stamping out the traffic among
the miners, Douglas determined to turn it to the account of revenue by
legalizing it at the rate of $600 for a license. For selling liquor to the
natives the penalty was placed at $25 to $100. Town lots were largely
demanded and no difficulty was experienced in disposing of a large number
under leases terminable at the pleasure of the Crown, held at a monthly
rental of £4 8s. payable in advance on the understanding that the holder
would be allowed a pre-emption right of purchase when the land was sold, in
which case the rent would count as part of the purchase money. Aliens might
hold lands for three years, after which they must become naturalized;
failing, they would either forfeit their holdings or be forced to convey
them to British subjects. The organization of a police force proved
impracticable owing to the high wages prevailing, the earnings of the miners
in the neighbourhood, which fixed the standard, ranging from £1 to £5 a day.
So, too, the idea of a courthouse and jail was abandoned for lack of the sum
of £1,000 which the erection would have required. A justice of the peace and
revenue officer, however, was appointed, and a chief constable sworn in. Mr.
George Pearkes, the Crown solicitor for Vancouver Island, who accompanied
Douglas, Begbie not yet having arrived, sat at the head of a commission
which brought various offenders to justice; among the latter a miner named
Eaton who had murdered a comrade was sentenced to transportation for life.
The enforcement of such penalties in the absence of any
penal settlement and owing to the heavy expense of deportation was another
of the difficulties of Douglas. From Hope the governor journeyed to Yale,
visiting the different encampments by the way. Here grants of land were made
on the same conditions as at Hope, a justice of the peace appointed,
together with a chief constable at $150 per month. A police magistrate was
also appointed at Lower Fountainville. The governor returned on September
26th, having by his speeches and reforms done much to create content among
the miners and to allay the irritation of the natives.
On November 17th an imposing party of officials left
Victoria for the headquarters of the new colony. The governor was in
command, with Rear-Admiral Baynes, Cameron, the chief-justice of Vancouver
Island, and Begbie, the judge of British Columbia, who with several officers
of the Royal Engineers, had now arrived; and their mission was the formal
launching of the colony of British Columbia. They sailed in H.M.S
Satellite, with the Hudson's Bay Company's Otter in attendance.
Within the mouth of the Fraser, the Beaver and the Recovery
received the party, which was landed at new Fort Langley. The day of the
ceremonial broke dark and lowering. A guard of honour received His
Excellency amid the firing of a salute; and in the presence of about one
hundred persons assembled in a large room of the fort, the weather rendering
a meeting in the open impossible, the oaths of office were taken, first by
Begbie as judge, and afterwards by Douglas as governor. Proclamation was
made of the Act establishing the colony; of an instrument indemnifying the
officers of the government from any irregularities that might have been
committed during the interval prior to the establishment of the Act;
declaring English law as the law of the colony; and revoking the exclusive
privileges of the Hudson's Bay Company. The governor did not leave the fort
until the following day, when a salute of fourteen guns pealed forth in his
honour.
It was expected that New Langley, or, as it was now
called, Derby, where these simple rites had taken place, would form the
permanent capital of the colony, and with that in view a survey of the town
was made and a sale of lots held soon after the departure of the governor.
The upset price was placed at $100, but so spirited was the bidding that
many of the lots brought from $200 to $400, and some of choice locations as
high as $750 each. In all, the sum of $68,000 was realized from the sale of
about four hundred lots. Work was begun upon a barracks for the Engineers,
and tenders were invited for a court-house, a jail, a church and a
parsonage. A proclamation to authorize the levying of customs duties was
issued. In the midst of these and other preparations, however, Colonel Moody
with his second in command, Captain J. M. Grant, arrived, and their report,
on military and other grounds, was unfavourable to Langley. It is possible
that the close proximity of a large block of lands held in reserve by the
Hudson's Bay Company may have had something to do with the original choice.
After a careful survey of the river, the site of New Westminster, some
distance lower down and on the opposite bank, was approved, and the
purchasers of lots at Langley allowed to exchange them for locations in the
new town A dispute arose as to the naming of the capital, Moody proposing
Queenborough, Douglas Queensborough, and Young objecting to both as a
paraphrase of Victoria. The difficulty was referred for settlement to the
queen who conferred on the place the title by which it has since been known.
In laying out the town, a proposal that one-quarter should be reserved for
purchasers in England and other colonies was vetoed by the colonial
secretary as a stimulus to speculation by non-residents. In the following
June a satisfactory sale of lots took place at New Westminster, three
hundred and ten being sold for $89,000. The largest sum paid for a single
lot was $1,925. In the meantime tenders for various public buildings had
been received, and "Sapper-ton," the quarter chosen for the accomodation of
the Engineers, was already rising in a spot notable for its romantic beauty.
Prior to this and immediately upon his arrival in the
colony, Colonel Moody and the Engineers had rendered prompt and excellent
service in a matter of a wholly different nature. This was the affair of
Hill's Bar, the richest and most populous camp on the river, and the
headquarters for whatever discontent the restrictions of British law and
government had created in the breasts of the foreign miners. Beginning in a
quarrel of rival magistrates, the matter was fast assuming the appearance of
an armed collision between the Yale and Hill's Bar camps, the latter under
the leadership of one McGowan, a notorious ex-judge of California, now a
fugitive from the vigilance committee of San Francisco. Moody in response to
a despatch threw forward a company of Engineers to Hope, while a hundred
marines and blue-jackets from the Plumper and the Satellite
were landed at Langley. With Begbieand Lieutenant Mayne of the Plumper
alone, Moody himself went on to Yale, with the object of investigating
in person the causes and true proportions of the disturbance. The first
church service in Yale was held by Moody during this visit. An unprovoked
assault by McGowan during his stay confirmed the opinion that occasion alone
was wanting for the whole community of miners to break into open
insubordination. Under cover of night, accordingly, the Engineers were
ordered up to Yale and the marines set in motion at Langley. The vigour and
celerity of the demonstration had the desired effect. Apologies were
tendered by McGowan and the incipient dissatisfaction was checked before it
had time to gather. After a further outrage McGowan fled the country. Though
not devoid of travesty, the incident was of wholesome effect upon the
scattered and irresponsible community as showing at least the energy and
power of the government and its determination to enforce good order.
Even prior to the coming of the Royal Engineers and the
establishment of the colony, the governor had launched his famous
undertaking of opening up the country by means of roads, for which, if for
no other achievement, his administration merits the supreme praise of
efficiency. Here, as in so many cases, Douglas's long and thorough training
in the needs and methods of the fur trade stood the colony in good stead.
With Victoria as centre many miles of excellent roadway had been built in
the neighbouring districts of Vancouver Island. When, therefore, on the
discovery of gold on the Fraser, the need of roads became the problem of the
hour, no lack of official will or understanding had to be overcome. How this
need was met in the earliest instance has been already hinted at in the
words of the colonial secretary to Moody. As an illustration of the
resourcefulness of Douglas and his complete command of those rebellious
forces which at the time were all he had at his disposal—forces which in
less trained or skilful hands might have run only in disorganized or harmful
channels—the building of the first trail to the Fraser diggings is of more
than passing interest.
To the miners who had braved successfully the dangers of
the sea passage from California, there still remained to surmount the swift
and treacherous current of the Fraser, narrowed into a torrent above Yale.
Monopoly was soon to lay an added tribute on the country's development, the
foreign owners of the steamboats plying on the lower river having joined to
raise the cost of transport from £5 to £14 a ton, a charge that brought the
inhabitants above to the verge of starvation. By the power of withholding
the privilege of registration, however, this evil was in time corrected, and
the obstacles against which Douglas fought in the present instance were
those of nature alone. From Yale, no other avenue was open to the mines
which lay beyond, than the rough and precipitous footpath of the river's
edge, where, on men's backs to and fro over the cliff, the food and tools of
the miners had perforce to be conveyed. How to transport supplies to the
front around these difficulties became at once the all-important question.
To some returning miners a route from Anderson Lake to Lillooet, thence by
Harrison Lake and river to the Fraser, was shown by the Indians. The
distance was seventy miles, over a generally level country. There were five
hundred miners at Victoria on their way to the diggings, restless and idle
men through the lack of easy transport. With instant appreciation of the
situation, Douglas adopted the following plan for the construction of a pack
road by the route described. In consideration of a deposit of $25 and an
agreement to work upon the trail until it was finished, the Hudson's Bay
Company at Victoria agreed to transport the miners to the point of
commencement on Harrison River, feed them during the work, and at the end
return the value of their deposit in supplies at Victoria prices. The
combination of credit and cooperation involved in the plan had been
suggested by the miners themselves and at once engaged their support. The
work was speedily completed, and at the end the men received their money
back, their transportation being reckoned a fair return for their labour,
while the company in addition to the temporary use of the money deposited
was left with a toll road of infinitely greater value than the
transportation and provisions it had cost. Some disagreement arose as to the
point at which the supplies covenanted by the company should be delivered,
the men holding that the upper end of the trail had been implied while the
company declared for the lower. This at the time was an issue of some
importance, beans which cost 1J cents a pound at Victoria being worth 5
cents on the lower Eraser and $1.00 at the upper end of the new road. The
dispute was ended by a compromise, the goods being delivered in the middle.
The home government read a somewhat exalted lesson from this achievement, as
Douglas was often to be reminded. If the settlers would combine so readily
in the construction of a road, united effort it was thought might safely be
reckoned upon in the formation of a police, the establishment of law, the
collection of revenue, and in the other efforts that might be necessary to
make life secure and the community prosperous.
As it proved, this notable feat was but the prelude of a
general plan of road building which under the existing conditions might
justly be termed colossal. Roads followed the development of the country
everywhere; no difficulty or cost of construction was permitted to stand in
the way once the need was thoroughly demonstrated. A wagon road from the
Harrison to the Upper Fraser, an enlargement in part of the first pack road,
was built in stages by the Royal Engineers in the two years following their
arrival. "The construction of the Harrison or Lillooet road," wrote Douglas
in 1861, "has been the great source of expenditure this season, that work
having cost the colony nearly £14,000. Large as the outlay may appear it
very inadequately represents the value of this important public work which
has removed the difficulty of access and the great impediment to the
development of the mineral regions of British Columbia." Hope and
Similkameen were also connected by a road surveyed and built by Mr. E.
Dewdney (afterwards minister of the interior for Canada and still later
lieutenant-governor of British Columbia), in conjunction with Mr. Walter
Moberley, C.E. This road, as subsequently extended and known as the Dewdney
trail, passed through the southern interior as far as Fort Steele in East
Kootenay, and formed for many years a well-used route of travel. Every
season saw the completion of several important reaches in these and other
links of the system which Douglas devised, all in accordance with a
comprehensive plan. But the crowning work of the series was the completion
of the great wagon road to J Cariboo. From Yale along the rocky canyons and
defiles of the Fraser, it wound past Lytton and the Thompson by way of
Ashcroft and the Bonaparte, joining the road from Lillooet at Clinton, and
forming with other units of the plan a mighty artery of travel deep into the
heart of the gold country. Even by present standards it was no mean feat of
engineering. It opened a region of unexpected richness for agriculture: how
rich in gold it was to prove will be referred to further on.
It would seem that even larger plans than these had
crossed the mind of Douglas. The trail from Hope to Kootenay, in his
ambitious vision, might one day cross the Rockies, meeting at Edmonton a
similar road built westward from the Canadas, the two to form a single great
highway across the continent by which immigrants from the eastern colonies
might enter the country,—for Douglas looked rather to Canada than to England
for the replenishing of the Pacific settlements. The dream was realized more
fully than even Douglas would have dared to hope when, within twenty years
of his own achievements, an army of men were at work upon the mountain
section of the Canadian Pacific Railway.
With the building of the system of communications of
which the end was the opening up of Cariboo, the work of the Royal Engineers
was finished. How large a part they had played in the early history of the
colony may have been surmised from the few references given above that show
them in the forefront of the colony's early development. Some feeling
against their employment and the expense thereby incurred had arisen, and in
1863 it was deemed advisable that they should disband. Colonel Moody and
some twenty-five of the force returned to England under the terms of their
original agreement; the rest received grants of land and became permanent
residents of the country.
In the record of official visits and reports that throw a
light upon the early history of the colony, mention should be made of a
notable journey taken by Mr. Justice Begbie in the spring of 1859.
Accompanied by Nicoll, high sheriff of British Columbia, and by Bushby, as
assize clerk and registrar, he proceeded by way of the Fountains to the
Upper Fraser, returning by the Lillooet route to Langley. The points which
chiefly impressed the judge were, the ready submission of the foreign j
population to the will of the executive; the) preponderance of the
Californian element in the population; the richness, both auriferous and
agricultural, of the country; the need of fixity of tenure for the promotion
of agriculture; and the total absence of means of communication, rendering
industrial occupations of whatever sort, with the single exception of
gold-digging, practically impossible. More important, however, than his
observations upon the condition of the young colony, Begbie established on
this visit that character for stern justice and utter fearlessness, which
left a lasting imprint on the progress of British Columbia. His
administration of the law amongst those lawless multitudes had all the force
and directness of the vigilance committee, without its passion. A lawyer to
the core, he could do right in spite of law. He made himself the guardian
rather than the judge of British Columbia, and he accomplished this result
by his unflinching resolve that crime of no degree should go unpunished. No
region in all that wild and inaccessible territory was too remote for the
strong and searching arm of his justice, and the wrong done to an Indian or
a Chinaman met with as prompt and sure requital as that done to a white man.
With the knowledge gained in a few months' time that in the hands of Begbie
justice was swift as it was inflexible, the battle of law and order was
already won, and the influence of the judge throughout the colony became
greater perhaps than that of any other man.
It will be necessary, too, before leaving this personal
chronicle, to notice the visit which Douglas paid to the mainland colony in
the autumn of 1859. The tour included New Westminster, Langley, Douglas,
Hope, and Yale, and was extended through the passes of the Fraser to Spuzzum
and the mining districts west of that locality. There had been a decline in
the number of miners since the previous year, and the governor estimated the
entire white population of the colony at not more than six thousand men. The
absence of wives and children was deplored. At the time, the exports of gold
from British Columbia were valued at £14,000 monthly, but the estimate did
not include the large amount remaining in the hands of the miners. No
schools had yet been established. With regard to the importance of
agriculture as a factor making for stability and permanence, the governor's
views were pressed as follows: "The colony is yet destitute of one highly
important element: it has no forming class, the population being almost
entirely composed of miners and merchants. The attention of the government
has been very earnestly directed to the means of providing for that want by
the encouragement of agricultural settlers, a class that must eventually
form the basis of the population, cultivate and improve the face of the
country, and render it a fit habitation for civilized man. The miner is at
best a producer, and leaves behind him no traces but those of desolation;
the merchant is allured by the hope of gain ; but the durable prosperity and
substantial wealth of states is, no doubt, derived from the cultivation of
the soil. Without the farmer's aid British Columbia must ever remain a
desert—be drained of its wealth, and dependent on other countries for daily
food." The report also referred to the road-building operations of the
moment in the following terms which convey very clearly the views of Douglas
on the subject of his greatest work: "The great object of opening roads from
the sea-coast into the interior of the country, and from New Westminster to
Burrard's Inlet and Pitt River, continues to claim a large share of my
attention. The labour involved in these works is enormous ;(but so essential
are they as a means of settling and developing the resources of the country,
that their importance can hardly be over-rated; and I, therefore, feel it
incumbent on me to strain every nerve in forwarding the progress of
undertakings so manifestly conducive to the prosperity of the colony, and
which, at the same time, cannot fail, ere long, to produce a large increase
in the public revenue. We hope to complete the last section of a pack road
leading, by the left bank of the Fraser, from Derby to Lytton, a distance of
one hundred and seventy miles, on or before February 1st next"
Inseparably associated with the early progress of the
colony, and especially with those great undertakings to which reference has
just been made— great both from their magnitude, the expenditures which they
entailed, and the necessities which they met—was the vexing problem of
finance. Here as on other points that will come in due course to be noted
the governor and the home authorities were not always in agreement. Douglas,
under stress of the immediate need, begged repeatedly for a grant from
parliament, or, failing that, for a loan which the colony might repay when
it had received the impetus which a wise expenditure would give to the
development of its resources. In addition to roads, a seaport town, to
render the colony with its five hundred miles of seaboard less dependent
upon Victoria, was needed. For this purpose the governor, taking into
account the difficulty of access to the Fraser, and looking forward to the
time when the colonies of British Columbia and Vancouver Island might be
one, would have chosen Esqui-malt, leaving the navigation of the Gulf of
Georgia to a class of small, safe and swift steamers. Lighthouses at least
the colony must have. To Douglas, with the distrust of the foreigner which
he could never wholly dismiss, the military protection of the colony was
among the government's chief responsibilities. The Satellite which
was placed on the coast-guard service in 1858 had been almost immediately
withdrawn, and though the admiral of the Pacific squadron had given what
help he could, many boats had escaped the customs and several unlicensed
miners had found their way to the diggings. The Royal Engineers, of course,
had other and more pressing occupations than that of police duty. To these,
and similar appeals, however, the colonial office had but one reply. It
seemed inexplicable to Downing Street that a country whose sands were of
gold and whose population had sprung up with such incredible rapidity should
find the question of a revenue difficult. In vain Douglas pointed to the
extraordinary difficulties presented in the opening up of the country; to
the outflow of population, easily to be prevented if employment on the
proposed works were available; and to the narrow means that were at the
colony's disposal, especially in view of the high level of wages and prices
which continued as long as free placer gold constituted the source of the
country's prosperity. He was met only with repeated commendations to thrift
and economy, it being left to his own sagacity to suggest how that policy
could be exercised with the greatest safety. Again and yet again it was
enunciated that both British Columbia and Vancouver Island must be
self-supporting. He was at times even reproached with the slow progress made
in road-building.
Over sanguine, it may be, the governor was, in his
estimate of the speed with which the colony was likely to attain its full
development, and of the extent to which its progress would be helped by
public works alone. Yet it is easy to perceive wherein the task of Douglas
without help from England must have seemed as the making of bricks without
straw. In the end, however, the conservative policy of the colonial office
cannot be charged with having retarded a healthy growth. On one point of
importance it was unquestionably right. The colony had no cause to burden
its finances with the support of a military organization. The assistance
which the admiralty was able in a regular way to afford proved entirely
adequate to any need of this kind that arose, and the principle that if from
England skill and discipline were sent the colony should furnish the raw
material of a force, was at least well calculated to instil the habits of
self-reliance and freedom. So also, a suggestion that a steamer should be
supplied by Great Britain for the conveyance of troops and stores on the
Fraser was abandoned without material inconvenience. To the appeal for
lighthouses, which involved an expenditure of £7,000, a favourable answer
was given —to the extent at least of one-half the cost and the loan of the
whole amount, the colonies to assume the other moiety as a joint obligation.
On the whole it was an unmixed boon that the influence of
the home government, in so far as it prevailed, was of this restraining
character. No feature of the rule of Douglas aroused more lasting opposition
than the lavish scale on which he spent the income of the colony. It is true
that very great achievements could be pointed to. Lawlessness was
effectually suppressed—or rather, as has been seen, was never afforded the
opportunity of raising its head; a self-supporting postal department was
established; an assay office was founded and a mint projected; the
navigation of the Fraser and Harrison rivers was improved; and, finally,
communication with the mines, even with those of the remotest regions, was
opened up and maintained on the efficient scale that has been noted. It was
not to be supposed that results like these could be achieved without a
struggle. The customs tax of ten per cent., and the license fees of the
miners formed, in addition to the proceeds of land sales, the only sources
of revenue. The taking out of licenses, as might have been expected, was
avoided in every possible way by the miners, and the fees paid only upon
compulsion. An attempt to collect a royalty on the gold output proved a
failure, no means being at hand to compel the miners to announce their
findings or to support the army of inspectors which would have been required
to make an official surveillance effective. The whole led Douglas at one
time to suggest an entire remodelling of the mining regulations under a plan
by which the gold-fields might have been treated as Crown lands to be let in
large or small allotments at a fixed rental. As the regulations stood,
however, under the Act proclaimed in 1859, a not inconsiderable sum, despite
evasions, was annually reaped by the colony. Nevertheless the end of the
administration of Douglas found the colony burdened with a yearly increasing
debt, its loans barely negotiable in the London market, and its tax rate
risen to nearly £19 per capita annually, or about eight times the rate then
prevailing in Great Britain. Only by the most stringent economies in the
years immediately following was the credit of the community preserved, so
that by 1871 the rate had been reduced to approximately £5, or by
over two-thirds. On the other hand, it is to be borne in mind that without
the investments made by Douglas the development of the interior would
undoubtedly have been retarded, while the control of the government over the
heterogeneous and foreign population might have been weakened to the point
of danger.
The marked and plenary instructions of the colonial
office with reference to the status of the Hudson's Bay Company in British
Columbia, suggest some mention of the subsequent career of that corporation
in the community with whose beginning it was so closely identified. The
present is an appropriate connection in which to include a statement of this
character, for of all the relations which the company bore to the colony
those involving the question of finances were the most provocative of
dispute, while the features of the rule of Douglas of which the government
of Great Britain took closest cognizance were those which concerned his
dealings with the company, his former master. The financial problem resolved
itself into the question whether the colony should be responsible for the
debts contracted by the company in the initial stages of its rule on
Vancouver Island. The position assumed towards Douglas by the imperial
government in the other matter had a very patent explanation. From his
seventeenth year Douglas had breathed no other atmosphere than that of the
great fur-trading monopoly. It was impossible that he should see from any
other point of view. If specific instances were wanted, they were furnished
by the acts with which on the first discovery of gold in the Fraser Valley
he had sought to impose a tribute for the company on the development which
immediately set in. It will be remembered that, on the occasion referred to,
Douglas had proclaimed that for vessels other than those of the company to
navigate the waters of the Fraser was an infringement of the company's
rights; and that in a proposal which his government vetoed he would have
bound the Pacific Mail Company to carry the company's goods and no others.
For acts like these, the fact that his first commission as governor was held
in conjunction with the office of chief factor, was to blame, rather than
Douglas himself. But even when his direct connection with the company had
been severed, a spirit of partizanship was bound to continue and to render
necessary the most stringent measures of prevention. How that spirit wrought
in the bosom of the governor is well illustrated in a passage which occurs
in one of his later despatches, which shows as much by its tone as by the
words themselves, his attitude to his master of so many years:
"I will take the liberty," he wrote, "which I feel
satisfied you will under the circumstances excuse, of correcting an
erroneous impression which appears to pervade the public mind of England. I
allude to the often asserted opinion that the Hudson's Bay Company have made
an unjust and oppressive use of their power in this country, a statement
which I can assure Her Majesty's government is altogether unfounded. On the
contrary, it would be an easy matter to prove that they have been of signal
service to their country, and that the British territory on the north-west
coast is an acquisition won for the Crown entirely by the enterprise and
energy of the Hudson's Bay Company. For, on commencing business operations
in this quarter the whole coast was held by foreigners, and it is only since
the year 1846 that the Hudson's Bay Company have derived any real protection
from the license to trade, as until that epoch the trade was open to all
citizens of the United States, in common with the Hudson's Bay Company.
Perhaps you will excuse me saying this much, as a sense of justice leads me
to exert the little influence I possess in protecting from injustice men who
have served their country so well. At this moment I am making use of
Hudson's Bay Company's establishments for every public office; and to their
servants, for want of other means, I commit in perfect confidence the
custody of public money."
As to the internal history of the company after the lapse
of its special privileges in 1859, a few words will suffice. On the
retirement of Douglas, Dallas became the president of the Victoria board of
management, of which Work and Dugald Mc-Tavish were the other members, Ogden
having died in 1854. Work died in 1861, and as Dallas had been moved to
Rupert's Land, McTavish succeeded to the command, with Finlayson and Tolmie
on his board of advisers. In 1870, McTavish was tranferred to Montreal to
fill a place left vacant by the rise of Donald A. Smith in the service, and
James A. Grahame became the head of the board. After Grahame, followed
William Charles in 1874, with Alexander Monro as manager of lands. But the
building of the Canadian Pacific Railway, the inflow of population, and the
imposition of the Canadian tariff, revolutionized the old conditions of the
trade. Winnipeg became the centre of the Western Department as of other
portions of the company's domain, the railway permitting frequent visits
from the chief commissioner in charge. To-day a series of well conducted
retail stores in the leading centres of population as well as in the
outposts of settlement are all that visibly remain, in the portions of the
country that have been opened to industry, of the once all-powerful
domination of the company in British Columbia.
At least one result of the early rule of the Hudson's Bay
Company is so important as to warrant special mention. It may be laid wholly
to its influence that the opening years of settlement in British Columbia
were free from the terrible scenes of Indian outrage. How great was that
good fortune may be understood by a glance at the mining history of
California or the later chronicles of other of the western states. To the
Indians of British Columbia the rush of 1858 took on the form of an armed
and unprovoked invasion of their territory. As they had received payment
previously for their furs, so now they demanded payment for the gold of
their streams and mountains. Without the restraining influence of the
company, the product of nearly half a century of intercourse centred now in
Douglas as the Indians' trusted friend of many years, a war of extermination
might easily have been launched against the whites, especially against the
domineering and aggressive immigrants from the United States. Expeditions
overland from Oregon in the early days of the inflow had been harassed and
the stragglers cut off. On the Fraser, however, in spite of constant
provocation from the American miners, no outbreak occurred for some time. An
incipient collision was caused in 1858 by the murder of two Frenchmen on the
trail above the canyons of the Fraser, but a band of miners which forced its
way to the forks of the Thompson put the enemy to flight and was followed by
a second detachment which concluded a treaty of peace with over two thousand
natives between Spuzzum and the Thompson. Douglas, who was on his way to the
diggings at the time of the disturbance, did not deem further action
necessary. He had on a previous occasion stood between the miner and the
Indian with an impartiality that took count of provocation on either side.
The native leader, a man of unusual energy of character and corresponding
influence with his tribe, had been taken subsequently into the service of
the government, where he proved exceedingly useful in the settlement of
other difficulties. The justice of the governor, who reminded the
gold-seekers at every turn that their position was one of sufferance under
Her Majesty's government, that no abuses would be tolerated, and that the
law would protect the Indian no less than the white man, was the most
effective instrument that could have been devised in the interests of peace.
In a short time the Indians were engaged in the digging of gold in perfect
harmony with the other miners at wages ranging from three to five dollars a
day. Two massacres perpetrated by the Chilcotins in 1864 were almost the
only later outbreaks that occurred. In other words, the fur trade had ceased
to be, and the company had bequeathed to the industry that displaced it a
docile and a useful native people.
One other gift, of curious interest to the ethnologist,
the early traders handed down. Among the first difficulties of the commerce
of the north-west coast, not the least was found in the surprising number of
the native languages. Within the limited area of Oregon no less than twelve
distinct linguistic stocks, utterly dissimilar in words and grammar, were
represented, while many of these were further split up into dialects which
often differed widely from each other. All alike were remarkable for
harshness and obscurity of pronunciation and construction, besides being
spoken over a very restricted space. To provide some common means of
communication became an immediate necessity, if barter were to be
established at all. The result was that a trade language, called afterwards
the "Chinook jargon," grew into existence. Though the foreigners took no
pains to learn the native languages, it inevitably happened that at Nootka,
at first the chief emporium of the trade, a few words of the dialect there
spoken became known, while the Indians were made familiar with a few English
or Spanish expressions. When the trade shifted to the Columbia, the
Chinooks, quick at catching sounds, acquired the new vocabulary, and the
jargon in this elementary form was in use among the natives at as early a
date as the visit of Lewis and Clark in 1804. Later, the Chinook language
was drawn upon for additional words; the French-Canadian voyageur
added his quota; and the jargon assumed a regular form, and became a means
of general intercourse. In 1840, it contained about two hundred and fifty
words, of which eighteen were of Nootka origin, forty-one were English,
thirty-four French, and one hundred and eleven Chinook. By 1863 the number
had doubled. Rude and formless as it was, it has been the source of great
and varied benefits. Trade was made possible by it, friendly intercourse
between the tribes was stimulated, many deadly feuds ehminated, and early
missionary endeavour assisted. If not a model language, the jargon may at
least have served to point the way to some higher invention for the uses of
an advancing civilization.
The mention of the Indian and his jargon leads naturally
to the subject of the missionary. How the Jesuits from Canada were among the
first in Oregon has been already stated. From that time forward, the Roman
Catholic Church has never ceased to labour in the vast field of the Pacific
slope. Father Demers was on Vancouver Island prior to 1846. Before that, he
had visited the Upper Fraser. When in 1847 he was made a bishop, his diocese
included not only British Columbia, but Alaska as well. The first Protestant
church in the colony was built by the Hudson's Bay Company at Victoria in
1855. The Methodist Church sent its first missionaries to British Columbia
in 1859. Thomas Crosby, the greatest name among them, arrived in 1862.
Opening a school at Nanaimo in 1863, Crosby had soon extended his influence
over one hundred and eighty miles of the coast, and over the Fraser valley
as far as Yale. In 1874 he removed to Fort Simpson, whence in time the field
was extended over one hundred and fifty miles to the north. A year before
Crosby's arrival, the Presbyterian Church had begun the work of
evangelization among the Indians and the miners. Perhaps the most signal
achievement of the missionaries was that of William Duncan, a layman sent
out in 1856 under the auspices of the Church of England Missionary Society,
to the savage Tsimpsean tribes of the northern coast. At Metlakahtla near
Fort Simpson a thriving industrial community sprang up where before the
coming of the missionary the most degraded natives of the coast were given
over wholly to violence and superstition. Duncan's aims were evangelistic
purely, and the collision which occurred with his ecclesiastical superiors
led to the removal of his colony to Alaska after a prolonged and bitter
controversy. To the clergy of the Church of England and of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, who first entered the field of missionary labour in
British Columbia, Douglas assigned a church, school and dwelling-house site
forming a block of four building lots, or about an acre of land in extent,
in all towns where they resided. He further recommended that free grants of
one hundred acres of rural land should be made in aid of every cure in
British Columbia. The Duke of Newcastle, however, with the experience of the
Canadas in mind, while approving of the first arrangement, objected strongly
to the practice of making free grants as endowments to livings.
While developments such as these were in progress in
British Columbia, affairs on Vancouver Island were not devoid of incident.
Victoria sank with the back-wave of the excitement of 1858, but rose again,
this time on a more stable basis, with the discoveries of 1860-61 in Cariboo.
The assembly met at leisurely intervals. Matter for a lengthy period of its
debates was furnished in the proposed organization of a joint stock company
to supply Victoria with water. Some useful wagon roads were built in the
neighbouring district. A registration act was passed. Education received
some attention. The miners temporarily resident in Victoria were placated,
chiefly through the personal tact of the governor. With the increase in
population and the growth of political issues, the need for newspapers was
felt; and the British Colonist was founded in 1858, soon ranging
itself, under the editorship of Amor de Cosmos, in an opposition, not always
consistent, to the governor and the council. Among the early occasions of
this opposition was an incident which well illustrates the temper of the
times, the character of Douglas and the nature of the rule which he
maintained.
The legislative assembly of the colony had originally
held its sessions in a building belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, which
served at once for the meetings of the House and as the offices of
government. More commodious quarters becoming necessary, the governor
proceeded to supply the want after the manner that seemed fitting. On due
thought, the land beyond James Bay commended itself as a site, and a bridge
was forthwith thrown across to connect it with the city. As the assembly was
not asked for an appropriation (the Hudson's Bay Company as the proprietors
of the island contributing the necessary funds under the arrangement of 1849
with the home government), its consent to the change was not deemed
necessary. It soon appeared, however, that the assembly did not share this
view. Resentment at the governor's attitude ran high, and, in a resolution
passed to protest against the removal of the buildings, the action of
Douglas was denounced as unconstitutional and a breach of privilege. The
governor's reply was characteristic. The assembly had borne no share of the
financial burden involved in this or other colonial improvements; as for the
bridge, it was the plain prerogative of the Crown to build bridges wherever
the public convenience demanded, provided that no private rights were
invaded. He added an explanation of the reasons which had dictated his
choice of a site. The position of the governor, under the existing
constitution of the colony, was impregnable, and the assembly had no
alternative but to yield. It may be added that time has set its seal of
approval on the governor's action; and the present stately buildings of the
province, erected in 1893, stand on the pleasant and convenient ground that
was selected by Douglas half a century ago.
Other matters which engaged the attention of the island
legislature in its early years were, the legalizing of United States
currency, the payment of the liabilities of the colony, and the question of
clergy reserves. The first was a plain necessity. In connection with the
finances of the colony, the assembly from the first refused to become liable
for the debts incurred during the regime of the Hudson's Bay Company, and
the latter was left to settle its claims with the home government. The
question of clergy reserves arose out of the original agreement between the
Hudson's Bay Company and its clergyman on the island. Under this arrangement
the major part (£300 of a total of £400) of the latter's stipend was to be
derived from the sale of public lands at that time under the administration
of the company. On the extinguishment of the company's title in 1859, the
question of the continuance of this arrangement at once arose. The
appointment of the then incumbent of the office had been intended, it
appeared, as a permanent one; and it was necessary therefore to provide for
his emolument. There can be little doubt that if it had not been for the
prompt and almost violent antagonism which was manifested, the situation
would have drifted imperceptibly into that of a state-supported clergy. A
reserve in excess of two thousand acres had been already set apart in
Victoria alone, and the appointment of a bishop and two other clergymen
authorized by the home government. The House of Assembly, however, refused
without popular warrant to confirm the continuance of the old arrangement;
and in the end even the grant of one hundred acres which it was proposed to
make to the clergyman of the company was reduced to thirty and transferred
under trustees to the local church. His salary was thenceforth paid by the
contributions of his congregation alone, supplemented by missionary funds
sent out from England.
Shortly after this signal service to the colony, the
first parliament of Vancouver Island was prorogued, the date being November,
1859. The elections followed in January, I860, and the new House, of
thirteen members, met about two months later. Helmcken alone of the former
assembly was re-elected; and he was continued in the Speaker's chair. The
second legislature lasted until 1863, when it was succeeded by the third
House, which in turn continued until the union of the two colonies in 1866.
To the period of the dual governorship belong the more
important of an extended series of negotiations having to do with the
interpretation and enforcement of the Oregon boundary treaty concluded in
1846. The San Juan affair (for by that title the incident in question is
usually known) had its root, as will be understood, in times remote, and its
final solution was not reached until some years after Douglas had closed his
official career. It may be dealt with in its entirety here, as, apart from
its intrinsic interest, it presents almost the sole view of Douglas, in the
higher sphere of international politics, under stress of a delicate and at
times dangerous situation.
It will be remembered that by the treaty of 1846, the
49th parallel of latitude had been accepted as the boundary between the
United States and British territory from the Rocky Mountains to the centre
of the channel which divides Vancouver Island from the mainland. From that
point, it was agreed, the line was to continue by the middle of the channel
southward to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, by the middle of which in turn it
should proceed to the Pacific. Now, in the southern portion of the Gulf of
Georgia, below the point at which the 49th parallel ceases as above to mark
the frontier, the Haro archipelago occurs; and as a result of the
configuration of these islands a choice of passages was offered by which the
boundary might reach the lower waterway. At the time of the treaty only two
of these straits had been surveyed: the Canal de Haro, so named, as the
archipelago itself was named, from the Spanish explorer,—a strait seven
miles in breadth, between the group and Vancouver Island; and the channel to
the east, of half the width, known as Rosario Strait,—otherwise as Vancouver
Strait, Ringgold's Channel, or the Canal de Fidalgo. The question
immediately presented itself as to which of these was intended to mark the
boundary by the treaty of 1846, the point involving the ownership of the
archipelago mentioned, made up of three large and several smaller islands,
of which San Juan, the most valuable, contained about fifty thousand acres.
Though both nations, through over twenty years of controversy, as wearisome
as it was long drawn out, attempted to prove that a definite understanding
existed at the time the treaty was agreed to, it is obvious that the
language of 1846 left room for dispute and that neither of the governments
in that year took cognizance of the exact path of the boundary as it passed
from the Gulf of Georgia to the Straits of Juan de Fuca.
The various steps by which the issue became sharply
defined, covering in all the first ten years of the dispute, were briefly as
follows. About the time of the founding of Victoria, and as a part of the
general policy involved in that development, the Hudson's Bay Company had
landed a number of sheep and cattle on the Island of San Juan. The colony
prospered, and within a few years' time not less than several thousand head
of live stock, including sheep, cattle, swine and horses, were included in
the company's establishment. A salmon fishery also was erected in 1851, and
the Americans who had already begun to frequent the island were warned to
fish inshore. Thus matters remained for a year longer, when the legislature
of Oregon proceeded to organize the archipelago, without reference to any
political significance which the operations of the British company might
have, as a portion of its domain. Again, in 1853, when the territory of
Washington took form, the islands passed, or were regarded by the
continental authorities as passing, under the new jurisdiction. No outward
change in conditions, however, occurred until 1854 when an attempt to levy
duties by the United States authorities on stock imported by the company led
to a sharp dispute between the latter and the officer deputed to enforce the
tax. This brought Douglas for a brief time on the scene, but had little
effect beyond calling forth an idle assertion of sovereignty on the part of
each nation. No actual collection was made at the time. In 1855, however,
thirty or more sheep of the company were seized and sold at auction by the
sheriff of Whatcom County, Washington. This at once brought the affair into
international prominence; and in 1856 commissioners were appointed by Great
Britain and the United States to examine into the data bearing thereon.
Pending the expected settlement, by order of the Secretary of State for the
United States, no taxes were enforced on San Juan, though the island was not
acknowledged as a British possession. A curious amenity during these early
years was the protection cheerfully afforded by the company to the United
States officials from the roving bands of Indians whose descents were always
of peculiar danger to the "Boston" frontiersmen.
The commissioners appointed by Great Britain were
Captains Prevost and Richards of the Royal Navy, the former of whom arrived
in H.M.S. Satellite in June, 1857. The latter reached Victoria in
H.M.S. Plumper a few months later and at once began an extended
series of explorations and surveys for the carrying out of which he had been
specially delegated. Mr. Archibald Campbell, with a staff of astronomers and
engineers, represented the United States. By December, 1857, six formal
meetings had been held by the commissioners, ending in a complete
disagreement. The treaty, as interpreted by the British, demanded that the
channel constituting the boundary from the 49th parallel southward should
possess three characteristics: (1) it should separate the continent from
Vancouver Island; (2) it should admit of the boundary being carried through
it in a southerly direction; and (3) it should be a navigable channel. In
the light of these requirements, it was urged against the Canal de Haro and
in favour of Rosario Strait that the former could not be said to separate
Vancouver Island from the mainland, seeing that the separation was already
effected by the other channel ; that a line drawn through the Canal de Haro
must perforce run westerly for a considerable distance; that though the Haro
channel answered to the third demand, yet, from the rapidity and
variableness of its currents and its lack of anchorages, it was less
suitable for the navigation of sailing vessels than Rosario Strait, which
was the channel followed by the vessels of the Hudson's Bay Company since
1825. The occupation of San Juan by the company for so many years was also
held to bind the island to the British colony. On the other hand, the
American commissioners contended that of the several navigable passages
connecting the Gulf of Georgia with the Straits of Fuca, the Canal de Haro
was preeminent in width, depth, and volume of water; that it was the one
usually designated on the maps in use at the time the treaty was under
consideration; that the other navigable channels through the archipelago
separated mere groups of islands from each other; and that the Canal de Haro,
since it washed the shores of Vancouver Island, was the only one that could
be said to divide the continent from that island. The objection that the
Canal de Haro would not throughout its entire course carry the boundary line
in a southerly direction was not, in the American view, well taken, seeing
that the word "southerly" was applied in the treaty equally to the Straits
of Juan de Fuca, the general course of which lay north by west. In brief, it
appeared to the United States that the deflection of the boundary from the
49th parallel was sanctioned by the treaty with the intention of securing
Vancouver Island alone to Great Britain and that with this broad principle
in view the archipelago should be considered as belonging to the mainland
and not to the great coastal island.
Two years had been consumed in these and other fruitless
negotiations, for though a central passage navigable to ships had been
discovered by the British survey party and proposed to the United States by
way of compromise no tangible result had followed. Meanwhile a number of
squatters, consisting mainly of American miners on their return from the
Fraser diggings, had settled on San Juan Island. In the year 1859 they
totaled some twenty-nine, as opposed to nineteen servants of the company. It
was a collision between these diverse local interests that brought on the
most acute phase of the dispute—a phase which but for the conspicuous tact
of the British authorities on the spot might easily have plunged the nations
into war.
It seems that an American named Cutler who had settled on
the island in 1859 was much annoyed by the depredations of a hog belonging
to the Hudson's Bay Company, and had shot and killed the animal. Of the
altercation which followed various accounts have survived. According to one,
the arrest of Cutler and his removal to Victoria for trial was threatened.
At least it was demanded by the company that a stipendiary magistrate should
be stationed on the island. The then commander of the military department of
Oregon was General Harney, a popular but injudicious officer, whose southern
origin has led to the suspicion that on the eve of the war of secession he
would have viewed with equanimity the sowing of strife between the United
States and England. The news of the Cutler affair reaching his ears during a
visit to San Juan, he accepted the version most unfavourable to the British
authorities, and, without mandate from Washington, transferred a company of
his command to the island, for the protection, as he alleged, of its
American citizens. Other detachments followed until the troops on San Juan
reached a total of four hundred and sixty-one, with eight thirty-two
pounders. A request from the governor for the withdrawal of the force met
with a peremptory refusal, in the first instance from Pickett, the officer
in charge, and afterwards from Harney himself. A suggestion of a joint
military occupation subsequently made by Douglas was also refused in terms
that gave just grounds for indignation. At Victoria the excitement was for a
time intense and the presence of the Plumper, Satellite, Tribune and
other British ships of war, having on board a force greatly superior to that
which held San Juan, would easily, under the provocation of the moment, have
precipitated an encounter but for the patience of those in command. Under
the statesmanlike policy that was adopted, only a single vessel at a time
was kept in San Juan harbour, for show of occupation, while the rest were
held at a safe distance. When the details of the affair reached Washington,
the fruits of this forbearance were quickly reaped. An official
investigation was conducted on the spot; Harney was ultimately recalled; the
officer who had given offence on San Juan was removed; the American troops
were for the most part withdrawn; and an arrangement was entered into by
which a force of British equal in numbers to those that were left were
landed without opposition on the island. For twelve years the joint
occupation was continued amid perfect harmony and good-will.
The dispute, thus stripped of the element of danger,
continued for a short time longer to engage the attention of the British
minister and the secretary of state at Washington, and then lapsed into
oblivion with the outbreak of the American civil war. It revived for a
moment in 1866; and in 1869 gathered so much notice as to suggest its
reference to the president of the Swiss republic. It was still unsettled,
however, in 1871, when a joint high commission met at Washington to consider
this and other questions affecting the relations of the United States and
Great Britain in North America. After a renewed discussion, as interminable
as the first, it was agreed that the whole affair should be submitted to the
arbitration of the German Emperor. Prevost was again the British
representative at Berlin, while Bancroft, the historian, acted for the
United States. Reports of experts were obtained and the question was debated
anew from every standpoint. Finally, the Emperor declared his award in
favour of the United States. The date was October 21st, 1872. In British
Columbia, where the result was accepted with equanimity, though not without
keen sense of loss, the hand of time had wrought many changes since the
excitement of 1859, and the colony was now a province of the young Dominion.
In the annual message of President Grant in the following
year the award was hailed with special satisfaction as leaving the two
countries for the first time in history without a question of disputed
territory on this continent. The remark was premature. It was only shortly
after that the boundary between Alaska and the Dominion was called in
question, to remain a subject of negotiations until 1903. The Behring Sea
dispute, moreover, had still to arise and run its fevered course until its
settlement under the Paris award of 1897.
It is also to the later years of the rule of Douglas, and
to the history at large of the two colonies, that the wonderful story of
Cariboo belongs. The tale has been often told. It is well worthy of telling
by the historian of British Columbia, seeing that the Cariboo placers gave
permanency, as the Eraser and Thompson diggings had given form, to the
mainland colony. The bars of the Fraser, in fact, began to fail within a few
months of their discovery. Population had no sooner reached its highest flow
than it began to ebb. This was perhaps inevitable from the very magnitude of
the movement. But into the spirit of the country, already sinking, new
vigour was instilled at the magic bidding of gold. To the miners pushing on
to the remote and inaccessible headwaters of the Eraser, where in their
fancy lay the coarse metal of which the lower diggings held but the sandy
effluent, the reward came in a series of finds that opened at once a new era
in gold-mining. In the autumn of 1859 the first strikes on the Quesnel were
reported. Richer and richer discoveries followed, and in six months the
famous Cariboo rush of 1860 had begun. The excitement drew upon a much wider
field than that of 1858, though it never brought so large and tumultuous an
army. From the ends of the earth they came, by sea around Cape Horn, by the
Isthmus of Panama (this being the favourite passage), and by caravan across
the prairies. From Canada the route lay by Chicago to St Paul, thence by
water to Fort Garry, thence by the trails of the fur traders, a desperately
difficult journey, as the narratives of several parties attest. Rival
agencies of transport to the diggings fought for the traffic; and frauds
upon the ignorant abounded. For five years the inflow, though varying, was
constant. Most important of all, the immigrants counted many well fitted by
birth and training to give a solid basis to the country which was to be
theirs long after every creek of the north had yielded up the lure that
first attracted them.
The region thus forced upon the attention of the world
may be roughly described as the high, wooded plateau that lies between the
sources of the Fraser and the Thompson and is contained between the upper
reaches of these waters as they move towards their junction. The Bear, the
Willow, the Cottonwood and the Quesnel, radiating from the auriferous slate
of the Snowshoe Mountains and falling into the Fraser, are its four great
rivers, all alike famous from the wealth of the tributaries on which the
diggings of the new field were established. It will be seen that the
district penetrated into the very heart of New Caledonia, where, since the
days of Conolly and Douglas, the Hudson's Bay Company had held the even and
prosperous tenor of its way: first under the command of Dease, famous for
his discoveries on the Upper Liard and for his Arctic voyages; later under
Ogden, wit as well as trader and organizer, and destined, as we have seen,
to a larger r61e in Oregon; and at the last under Manson, who for twelve
years of diminishing profits held the reins of power in that most desolate
of all the company's dominions. Needless to add, the rush into the Cariboo,
overflowing soon after to Omineca and Cassiar, sounded the death-knell of
the fur trade, already thrust back from the southern districts by the events
of the preceding years.
Apart from their richness, a radical change in the method
of working contributed not a little to the success of the Cariboo placers.
On the lower Fraser, the rocker and the sluice alone had been employed, and
operations were confined almost wholly to the surface. In the Cariboo, deep
mining was at once introduced; and by shafts, drifts, pumps and hoists the
gold-laden earth was brought to the surface. So rich was the result that
before the end of the second year two million dollars worth of coarse
nuggets had been shipped to Victoria by the fifteen hundred miners of the
district, and Cariboo had taken a secure place in history by the side of
Ballarat and the Sacramento.
It would be impossible here to trace the steps by which
the various camps were opened and the country stripped of its treasure. But
the most famous must at least be named. Each creek had a history of its own.
Quesnel Forks was the earliest locality to develop into a permanent camp. A
party of five with two rockers took out a hundred ounces of gold in a single
week, and mining at this point continued for several years. On Cedar and
Horsefly Creeks, southern tributaries of the Quesnel, several claims, among
them the "Aurora," yielded equal returns. The movement spread also in 1860
to the Bear River. In January, 1861, came the extraordinary finds on Antler
Creek, followed in the spring by those on the Harvey, Keithley, Cunningham
and Grouse, all the latter streams flowing from the north into the Quesnel.
The rush now overflowed to the Willow and the Cottonwood. Barkerville sprang
up on Williams Creek in the midst of a district fabulously rich, and has
since remained the centre of distribution in Cariboo. The Lowhee and
Lightning Creek camps followed. In 1862 the number of miners had risen to
five thousand and the output to three millions. Both of these totals were
exceeded in 1863; but after 1864 population and gold alike began to decline.
In 1867, however, there were still no less than sixty paying claims in
operation, and several of the mines continued to produce for many years. In
Omineca and Cassiar the excitement did not reach its height until 1871 and
had subsided by 1875; but in no year were the results so extraordinary as in
Cariboo from which in the first seven years alone an aggregate yield of
twenty-five millions was taken. J The gold occurred chiefly in a deposit of
blue clay underlying the beds of the creeks, many of which might literally
be said to have been paved with the metal. Individual earnings were
astounding. Over one thousand dollars a day were made by many. Six hundred
dollars to the single pan were recorded. One party took over seven hundred
ounces in two days, and in two months had heaped up a hundred thousand
dollars worth of gold. The difficulties were correspondingly enormous.
Joined to the inaccessibility of the region, the shortness of the season and
the terrible severity of the winters, the periodical floods and the depth at
which the gold occurred made the workings all but impossible to the average
gold-miner. Prices in the early days, when means of transportation in the
winter were-limited to dog sleds between Alexandria and Antler, rose to an
extraordinary level. Flour was $72 per barrel; beans 45 cents per pound ;
and bacon 68 cents per pound. To this the end came with the construction of
the Cariboo wagon road. On the whole, it is believed that of the army which
invaded Cariboo during 1860-63 one-third returned with nothing, one-third
with moderate earnings and the rest with independent fortunes. Terrific
feats of endurance were recorded of the men who under the spell of the gold
mania struggled against the tangled forests, the yawning canyons and the
precipitous mountains covered with snow which made up the region; struggled,
too, against the starvation of body and soul that was the miners' lot,
bereft as they were of kindly human intercourse, ruled by the law of the
beast, and in the end doomed either to disappointment, or, if success were
won, to the folly or viciousness that too often seemed its necessary part.
Truly if the web of that story is of romance, the woof is of tragedy. Yet it
was here the colony struck root; and almost every name in its early annals,
excepting those of the fur traders, is associated with the stirring history
of the gold-fields of Cariboo.
It was in the year in which the first decline in Cariboo
became apparent that the active connection of Douglas with the
administration of the two colonies terminated. In the case of Vancouver
Island his commission lapsed through the efflux of time in September, 1863.
The occasion was marked by popular demonstrations unmistakably sincere; and
the crowning honour of his career came in the knighthood conferred upon him
by the Queen. He was succeeded by Arthur Kennedy, Esq., who took up the
duties of office in the following March. In connection with the retirement
of Douglas from the governorship of the mainland colony, which did not occur
until 1864, a number of incidents of first importance in the history of the
colony require to be mentioned.
As early as 1861, the dual governorship had caused
dissatisfaction in British Columbia. Narrow as was the authority of the
assembly of Vancouver Island, it was at least a visible recognition of the
people's inherent right to govern. On the mainland nothing of the sort
existed, the governor being the maker, as, with the assistance of the
officials sent from England, he was also the administrator, of the laws.
Sectional jealousy, especially that of the leading towns, rather than any
deeply reasoned wish for similar institutions, led to an agitation, and the
feeling eventually took form in a petition which asked among other things
for the establishment of a representative assembly. It will be of interest
to note what were regarded by the residents of the lower Fraser as the chief
grounds for criticism of the manner in which their government was
administered. As described by Douglas himself in his official report on the
matter they were as follows :
1. That the governor, colonial secretary and
attorney-general did not reside permanently in British Columbia.
2. That the taxes on goods were excessive as compared
with the population (the latter being estimated at seven thousand, exclusive
of Indians) and were in part levied on boatmen, who derived no benefit from
them. The absence of a land tax was also complained of.
3. That the progress of Victoria was stimulated at the
expense of British Columbia, and that no encouragement was given to
shipbuilding, the leading industry of New Westminster, or to the foreign
trade of the colony.
4. That money had been injudiciously spent on public
works, and that contracts had been given without public notice, with the
result that they were subsequently sublet at a much lower rate.
5. That faulty administration had been made of the public
lands, several sections which had been declared public reserves having been
afterwards claimed by parties connected with the colonial government.
6. The want of a registry office for the recording of
transfers and mortgages was pointed out.
The reply of the governor to the first of these
complaints was, that he had spared no exertion in his divided duty to
promote the interests of both colonies, and that he had not consciously
neglected any opportunity of adding to the prosperity of either. As for the
other members of the executive, their offices, if confined to British
Columbia alone, would be little better than sinecures. The taxation of the
colony as compared, for example, with that of the neighbouring state of
Washington, was not excessive, and had been spent on roads and public works
in a manner that had materially reduced the general cost of living; moreover
the population including Chinamen was ten thousand, or, including Indians
(who, inasmuch as they were becoming more and more consumers of imported
goods, were entitled to be classed with the other inhabitants), some thirty
thousand, so that the rate was £2 per capita instead of £7 10s. as
complained of. The remission of duty on shipbuilding material, it was
pointed out, would open the door to injustice and discontent, and would do
little good to New Westminster as long as the timber business remained a
monopoly in the hands of a few persons. Clauses four and five were declared
to be wholly unfounded. With regard to the final grievance, a measure
providing means for the registration of real estate, the governor promised,
would be passed at the earliest moment practicable, the delay having arisen
only through the peculiar difficulties of the situation.
On the broad question of the adoption of representative
institutions, Douglas was of the opinion that the fixed population of the
colony was too small and of too motley a character to render the experiment
feasible. The British residents were few in number; there was no
manufacturing or farming class; the lumbering and salmon-curing industries
which to-day are so important in the Fraser valley had not yet been called
into existence; and the traders who constituted the only body in the colony
which was not migratory had comparatively a small interest in its
development. As a matter of fact New Westminster had in 1862 only one
hundred and sixty-four male adults, Hope but one hundred and eight, and
Douglas but thirty-three ; and these were the only centres which had
definitely expressed approval of the change. The governor's avowed intention
had been to proceed by degrees to the establishment of popular institutions,
through the formation of municipal councils to serve as training schools for
the people prior to the adoption of the larger idea of a colonial assembly.
There was, in fact, a radical difference in the position
of the two colonies at this early time of which the discontent on the
mainland took too little account. The island had the trades, professions and
real estate of its inhabitants on which to levy taxes. British Columbia had
its gold alone ; and a duty on the supplies carried inland formed its most
obvious means of revenue. The imposition of a tariff had the advantage also
of arousing no opposition from the miners, who were the sole support of the
colony, and whose requirements in the way of roads rendered a large
expenditure necessary. A free trade policy, on the other hand, was essential
to Victoria, barred as the city was from the mother country by distance and
from the United States by a hostile tariff, in order that the British
Columbia market at least might fall to her share. She was the centre of
population, the seat of trade, the nucleus of colonization, and the chief
source of revenue in the British settlements of the Pacific; to maintain
this position it was necessary that she should remain the general marketing
place of those possessions. The position of the governor, therefore, if it
afforded a unique opportunity from the standpoint of the colonies' interests
as a whole, was of no ordinary difficulty in view of the opposing policies
which it was his duty if possible to reconcile.
The arguments which Douglas advanced on the occasion of
the discontent of 1861 did not ultimately prevail. When the day of his
retirement arrived in 1863, the colonial office lost no time in deciding
that separate governors for the colonies were a necessity. The decision may
have been prompted by the difficulty of securing an officer equal to the
task of Douglas; but it was still more largely due to the inherent weakness
of the original arrangement. So, also, it was resolved that at least the
first step towards the adoption of representative institutions must be taken
without further delay. The suggestion of Douglas that the end should be
reached through the formation of municipal councils was not approved; but at
least it was perceived, though with avowed reluctance, that the approach to
an elective assembly must be gradual. The avenue which suggested itself was
the organization of a legislative council on a somewhat novel basis. The
power of nominating the council was to be vested in the governor; but he was
directed at the same time to so exercise that power as to constitute of the
council a partially representative body. This end, it was thought, would be
secured if one-third of the council was to consist of the executive,
one-third of magistrates from different parts of the colony, and the balance
of representatives of the people. The plan, it was admitted, did not
overcome the difficulties arising out of the migratory nature of the
population; but it was preferred with its imperfections to any untried
arrangement. The matter of evolving a working plan for securing the popular
representation,—whether by ascertaining informally the opinion of the
residents in each locality, by bringing the matter before public meetings,
or (as in Ceylon) by accepting the nominee of certain corporate bodies or
societies,—was left to the wisdom of the governor. To inaugurate the scheme
an extension of one year's time was made to the commission of Douglas as
governor of British Columbia.
The fact that the truest interests of the colonies lay in
union was not overlooked by the government of Great Britain in advising this
arrangement. Economy and efficiency of administration, the development of
political capacity, and the promotion of commerce, called with one voice for
solidarity. In salaries alone the saving would have been considerable. In
each, the governor received £3,000, and the chief-justice £1,200. The
colonial secretary received in Vancouver Island £600, and in British
Columbia £800; the attorneys-general, £300 and £500, respectively ; the
treasurers, £600 and £750, respectively; and the surveyors-general, £500 and
£800, respectively. In addition, British Columbia had a collector of customs
at £650; a chief inspector of police at £500, and a registrar of deeds at
£500. Douglas in a despatch written a few months before the end of his
official term strongly advocated union. For the time, however, local
prejudices proved too strong; and Frederick Seymour, formerly governor of
Honduras, was appointed to succeed Sir James in the governorship of British
Columbia.
In a previous chapter the words were given of the address
with which Douglas as governor of Vancouver Island opened the first assembly
of that colony. The speech with which he greeted the first meeting of a
representative body on the mainland, is of no inferior interest as
reflecting current opinions and conditions. The date was January 21st, 1864.
The withholding of popular institutions, he declared, during the infancy of
the colony, had been prompted only by regard for its happiness and
prosperity. A vigorous prosecution of public works was urged for the purpose
of giving value to the waste lands of the colony. For the increase of
population public lands had been thrown open to settlement, and every effort
made to promote the development of the country, though thus far with
unsatisfactory results. From the Indians, favourable reports had been
received; reserves based on a maximum allowance of ten acres for each family
had been already set aside for them. The opening of postal and telegraphic
communications between British Columbia and the head of Lake Superior was
foreshadowed. Appropriations for education and religious purposes were
recommended, with a disclaimer added of any desire to see an endowed church
in the colony. Finally, the expenditures of the past year, amounting in all
to £192,860 (of which £83,937 had been spent on roads and £31,615 on civil
establishment) were laid before the council. The revenue to meet this was
but £110,000 of which over half was derived from customs dues. Of the
deficit, £65,805 had been met by loans, a sum which still left £17,055 to be
accounted for, besides an additional £10,700 due to the imperial government
for the expenses of the Royal Engineers. For 1864, the expenditures were
estimated at £107,910 and the income at £120,000, though no provision was
made in the former for the maintenance of a gold escort or for the erection
of further public works. The address concluded with an appeal to the council
for advice on this pressing problem of finances.
It will be of interest to notice before leaving this part
of the subject the steps by which the union, after over three years of
further intermittent discussion, was achieved. In the beginning the movement
was confined entirely to Vancouver Island, where by the year 1865 it had
gathered not a little force, the assembly voting strongly in its favour and
being willing to leave the question of a constitution unreservedly to the
home government. The relations of council and assembly in the island colony
had not been altogether happy. There was no medium between the governor and
the assembly, and the time of the council was occupied for the most part in
correcting the mistakes and undoing the crude legislation of the lower
house. The decline of trade which accompanied the exhaustion of the bars of
the Fraser, and the fact that the Cariboo mines were never a poor man's
diggings and therefore did not attract more than a comparatively small
population, had also led in large part to the dissatisfaction felt in
Victoria, where the most of the supplies for the mines were sold. Victoria,
moreover, had had no share in the important developments which followed in
1864 the discoveries of the Kootenay district, situated about five hundred
miles due east of New Westminster and yielding for a time during the " Big
Bend" rush, a total revenue to the public treasury of not less than £1,000 a
week. The entire supplies for these were secured by the way of New
Westminster or the Columbia. The mines even attracted many from Victoria's
best customer, Cariboo.
On the other hand there were several reasons why the
mainland colony should for the time look askance upon the idea of union. The
year 1865 was one of exceptional progress in the opening up of the country.
The trail from the Fraser to Kootenay, surmounting three ranges of mountains
and not only affording access to the mines but establishing a new route
through the Kootenay pass from the Pacific to the Hudson's Bay lands beyond
the mountains, was in itself a work which might well infuse self-confidence
even into a struggling colony. By the end of 1865 New Westminster was
connected with the whole telegraphic system of the United States, Canada and
Newfoundland, and with Cariboo. The constitution of 1863 had been
successfully placed in operation, the popular candidates being elected at
public meetings called by the magistrates. But the real opposition to union
lay in the rivalry of Victoria and New Westminster for the honour of being
chosen as the capital, and the fear which the latter had of being supplanted
by the older, wealthier and more influential community. Being almost the
sole municipality which found a voice, New Westminster was able for some
time to combat successfully all agitation for union. The upper country cared
little whether the colonies were one or separate. But on the lower Fraser it
came at last to be felt that the uncertainty was interfering seriously with
progress.
In 1866, a petition in favour of union was signed by four
hundred and forty-five persons, and there was probably a much wider feeling
had it been able to make itself heard. In the end the British government
decided the question, and the authority of the executive government and
council of British Columbia was extended over Vancouver Island, the number
of members of the council being increased to twenty-three. The customs
regulations of the mainland colony were likewise extended to the island.
Other ordinances remained for a time as before. The original authority of
the governor to make regulations for peace, order and good government was
not restricted. The Act bore date of August 6th, 1866. A short time after,
the attorney-general of Vancouver Island introduced a bill for assimilating
its laws with those of British Columbia. There then remained only the
question of the seat of government—a rock which the Act of union had
discreetly avoided. Amid the violent altercations of partisans, the choice
fell on Victoria, and though the bitterness of the defeat rankled long on
the mainland no effort subsequently availed to secure a reversion of the
decision.
The foregoing outline of the process by which British
Columbia, as we know it to-day, attained its united form, has gone somewhat
beyond the time when the man who had brought order out of the chaos and had
been the chief agent in shaping the progress of the colony in the course it
has since pursued, laid down the direction of its affairs. With the setting
in active motion of the forces which resulted in union, Sir James Douglas
passed from the scene. It is a moment of solemnity, for communities as for
individuals, when the past is cast off forever. How large a part was Douglas
of all that had happened since the birth of the two colonies has been
sufficiently shown. But there was an added reason why his retirement at this
time was of no ordinary significance, little though the change was marked by
outward or immediate results. The spirit of that old time force, the
Hudson's Bay Company, which had been the first to conquer the tremendous
barriers by which nature has divided the Pacific slope from the rest of the
continent, which had subdued the intractable native, and had opened the
first pathway for civilization to the western ocean, lived and breathed in
Sir James Douglas. It died only with his passing. The change was for better
things, as the future was soon to show, but that this was possible is a
tribute to the wisdom with which the foundations had been laid.
It is left to treat of the remaining years of Douglas and
to estimate the value of his work and personality in the founding of British
Columbia. In connection with that task it will be well to note in very brief
review the leading features of the later history of the colony, especially
those that have their visible root in the era of colonial administration, in
order the better to appreciate the nature of that early planting from which
the present fruitful harvest has sprung.