In 1845 Dr. McLoughlin sent
in his resignation to the Hudson's Bay Company. Its rules required one
year's notice before an officer could resign. His resignation took effect
before the immigration of 1846 arrived. As this address relates to Dr.
McLoughlin, and only incidentally to the Oregon Pioneers, I shall not go
into details about the immigrations succeeding that of 1845. Dr. McLoughlin
kept a store and lived at Oregon City after his resignation. To the
immigrants of 1846 and after, and to others, as long as he was in business
there, he continued, as far as he was able, the ?ame hospitality and the
same good and humane treatment he had exercised when Chief Factor at Fort
Vancouver. The Barlow road was built in 1846 and the immigrants of that year
and succeeding years could bring their wagons by that road from The Dalles,
over the Cascade Mountains, to Oregon City. By common consent of all good,
honest pioneers, he had been named "The Good Doctor," and "The Good Old
Doctor," and he was known by these names to the time of his death. They also
came to call him the "Father of Oregon." Dr. McLoughlin's resignation from
the Hudson's Bay Company became necessary to maintain his self-respect.
I have spoken of Capt. Park and Lieut. Peel, British
officers, who brought the letters of Admiral Seymour and Captain Gordon to
Dr. McLoughlin in 1845. They were also sent as spies. They were succeeded by
two more spies, Capt. Warre and Lieut. Vavasour, both of the British army.
The two latter stayed at Fort Vancouver and elsewhere in Oregon for some
time. In their report Warre and Vavasour charged, mainly, that the policy
pursued by Dr. McLoughlin and the Hudson's Bay Company, at the different
forts in the Oregon Country, had tended to the introduction of American
settlers into the country until they outnumbered the British. To prove this
position, they instanced the assistance rendered the different immigrations,
one of which (1845) was arriving while they were at Vancouver. They charged
that goods had been sold to the American settlers at cheaper rates than to
British subjects; that Dr. McLoughlin and the Company had suffered
themselves to join the Provisional Government "without any reserve except
the mere form of the oath;" that their lands had been invaded, and
themselves insulted, until they required the protection of the British
government "against the very people to the introduction of whom they had
been more than accessory." There was more in this report of like import.
As was to be expected Dr.
McLoughlin's answer was dignified, forceful, and sufficient. I give only a
few of his points. In his answer Dr. McLough-lin said, concerning his
treatment of the missionaries : "What would you have? Would you have me turn
the cold shoulder to the men of God, who came to do that for the Indians
which this Company has neglected to do?" He said he had tried to prevent the
American settlers remaining idle, becoming destitute, and dangerous to the
Company's servants. Drive them away he could not, having neither the right
nor the power. That these settlers had not come expecting a cordial
reception from him, but quite the contrary; that while he had done some
things for humanity's sake, he had intended to, and had averted evil to the
Company by using kindness and courtesy towards the American immigrants. As
to joining the Provisional Government he showed the necessity and wisdom of
his actions under the circumstances. To the accusation that the Company had
submitted to insult, he said: "They were not to consider themselves insulted
because an ignorant man thought he had a better right than they had." As to
the British government, it had not afforded protection in time, and that it
was not the duty of the Hudson's Bay Company to defend Great Britain's right
to territory. The obligation of the Company's officers, whatever their
feelings might be, was to do their duty to the Company. He admitted helping
the immigrants of 1843, 1844, and 1845, and saving the lives and property of
the destitute and sick. He also admitted to assisting the immigrants of 1843
to raise a crop for their own support and of saving the Company from the
necessity of feeding the next immigration. And he said: "If we had not done
this, Vancouver would have been destroyed and the world would have judged us
treated as our inhuman conduct deserved; every officer of the Company, from
the Governor down, would have been covered with obloquy, the Company's
business in this department would have been ruined, and the trouble which
would have arisen in consequence would have probably involved the British
and American nations in war. If I have been the means, by my measures, of
arresting any of these evils, I shall be amply repaid by the approbation of
my conscience. It is true that I have heard some say they
would have done differently; and, if my memory does not deceive me, I think
I heard Mr. Vavasour say this; but as explanation might give publicity to my
apprehension and object, and destroy my measures, I was silent, in the full
reliance that some day justice would be done me."
The Governor and the directors of the Hudson's Bay
Company apparently neither understood nor appreciated the conditions in
Oregon in 1843, and in the immediate succeeding years, or Dr. McLoughlin's
motives and humanity in assisting the immigrants. While the Governor in
Chief and these directors were probably men of high character, and,
individually, men of humanity, as representatives of this great trading
company, they seemed to have considered Dr. McLoughlin's actions in
assisting the American immigrants to settle in parts of the disputed Oregon
Country by relieving their distresses, and saving them from suffering and
starvation, as amounting almost to treason to his Country and as being
untrue and false to the Hudson's Bay Company and its interests. They
believed that he had failed to carry out its policies, if not its express
instructions, which they felt he should have followed, as the chief of its
enterprises west of the Rocky Mountains, no matter what the circumstances
were or what the consequences might be. They did not seem to understand
that, if the early immigrants had not been assisted, helped, and rescued, as
they were, by Dr. McLoughlin, it might have been fatal to Fort
Vancouver and precipitated a war between the United States and Great
Britain. As has been already said the Hudson's Bay Company, under royal
grant, had an absolute monopoly in trading with the Indians in what was
called British America, that is, northward and westward of the United
States, excepting the British Provinces and also excepting the Oregon
Country. In the latter the Company had the exclusive right, under said
grant, to trade with the Indians, but on the condition that it should not be
to the prejudice nor exclusion of citizens of the United States, who had the
right to be in the Oregon Country under the convention of joint-occupancy.
Undoubtedly the Governor in Chief and directors of the Hudson's Bay Company
had a feeling that the Company and its trade should not be interfered with
in the Oregon Country. For more than thirty years it and the Northwest
Company, with which it had coalesced in 1821, had had almost absolute
control of trade with the Indians in nearly all of the Oregon Country. Its
practical monopoly there had been almost as complete as its actual monopoly
in British America. The exercise of absolute power usually begets a feeling
of a right to continue the exercise of such power. The head-officers of the
Company resented the actions of Dr. McLoughlin which tended to weaken the
power of the Hudson's Bay Company and to interfere with its control of the
fur trade in the Oregon Country.
An Indian trading company is
much more likely to be mercenary than humane. The headquarters of the
Hudson's Bay Company were at London. Oregon was a long distance from London.
Under the conditions it may not be surprising that greed of gain and selfish
interests outweighed humanity in the minds of these officers in charge of
the Hudson's Bay Company. It is true none of them were in Oregon when these
immigrants came. None of these officers had ever been in the Oregon Country,
excepting Sir George Simpson, the Governor in Chief. These officers did not
see the distresses, the sufferings, or the perils of these immigrants. Their
information came largely from others, who were not friends of Dr. McLoughlin,
and who did not approve his actions. Dr. McLoughlin had been for so long a
time a Chief Factor of the Company; he had been, up to the arrival of the
immigration of 1843, so faithful to its policies and interests; he had so
increased its trade, and added so largely to its revenues, that he could not
be summarily dismissed. But he was a man of pride and of high quality, and
he 1/ could be forced to resign. This the Governor in Chief and the
directors of the Hudson's Bay Company accomplished. In thus acting unjustly
to Dr. McLoughlin, they were unconsciously assisting to make him the eternal
hero of Oregon. In resigning Dr. McLoughlin gave up a salary of twelve
thousand dollars a year. He made his home at Oregon City, where he expected
to pass the rest of his life, with the intention of becoming an American
citizen as soon as possible. He invested his wealth at Oregon City in
various enterprises in an attempt to assist in upbuilding Oregon.
His resignation marks the
beginning of his tribulations which ended only with his death. The details I
shall presently set forth. In assisting the immigrants Dr. McLoughlin did
not count the cost nor fear the consequences. His humanity was greater than
his liking for wealth or position. He had no greed for gain, no selfishness.
Had he anticipated the consequences I believe that he would not have
hesitated nor acted otherwise than he did. Frances Fuller Victor wrote of
Dr. McLoughlin and his tribulations: "Aristocrat, as he was considered by
the colonists [American settlers] and autocrat as he really was, for twenty
years throughout the country west of the Rocky Mountains, he still bravely
returned the assaults of his enemies in the language of a republican. He
defended the American character from the slurs of government spies, saying,
'they have the same right to come that I have to be here,' touching lightly
upon the ingratitude of those who forgot to pay him their just debts, and
the rudeness of those, whom White mentions as making him blush for American
honor. But whether he favored the Company's interests against the British,
or British interests against the Company's, or maintained both against the
American interests, or favored the American interests against either, or
labored to preserve harmony between all, the suspicions of both conflicting
parties fell upon him, and being forced to maintain silence he had the bad
fortune to be pulled to pieces between them."