THE moment of Douglas's arrival at Fort Vancouver was an
important one in the history of the company. Up to 1830 little had been
accomplished west of the Rocky Mountains beyond the slow and laborious
establishment of a single pathway to the sea and the subjection of the
country immediately tributary. New Caledonia had been given, for the time,
its full measure of development; but the situation of McLoughlin at Fort
Vancouver was still, to outward seeming, not unlike that of Fraser twenty
years previously. The new fort had, however, what Fraser's posts had not,
the illimitable promise which the command of both sea and land and the
adaptability of the latter for agriculture held out. With the building of
Fort Vancouver in 1824 and the occupation of the Columbia, the way was
cleared for a policy of expansion on a scale unprecedented in the previous
annals of the company. For this, after six years of preliminary effort, the
time was now considered ripe; and Douglas was a part of the material which
was placed in the hands of McLoughlin. It was the fortune, therefore, of
Douglas to be identified from the first with the movement which brought the
whole of the coast and the lower mainland of
British Columbia under the subjection of the
white man.The full measure of the company's design at
that period may be guessed from the part that was actually realized.
McLoughlin was the directing spirit, though Douglas from the first entered
fully into the confidence of his chief and assisted in the formation as well
as the execution of his plans. That the company had in view a great trade
north and south along the coast, with Russians and Mexicans as well as the
native tribes; that it set no bounds to the regions it sought to dominate in
the interior; that the Sandwich Islands were included in its commercial
suzerainty; this much we know from history. That it cast its vision still
further, to the Orient and the southern seas, is not improbable. Magnificent
as was the dream of an ocean added to a continent for its sole trade, it was
no more than the occasion seemed to warrant. Ocean and continent alike were
a no-man's domain; not a rival in 1825-30 was in sight. But events moved too
rapidly to leave so tremendous a development to private enterprise. The
advent of the American colonist in Oregon, the establishment of the United
States in California, and the definite partitionment of the north-west coast
between Great Britain and the republic in the celebrated treaty of 1846,
were destined to dissipate these hopes almost as soon as they were formed.
The missionaries were in Oregon within a decade of McLoughlin himself; and
they were followed by a population that was to drive the fur trader forever
from the land. For the forty years, however, that followed the advent of the
white man west of the Rocky Mountains, the history of that territory is the
history of the fur trade. Its earlier stages have been already outlined. In
the present and in the following chapter will be noted the more important
developments that ensued, with Fort Vancouver for centre, during the second
quarter of the century, or until the division of Oregon between Great
Britain and the United States, and the removal of the company's headquarters
north of the 49th parallel. In discussing the period, it will be necessary
first to trace the natural process of expansion, northward in the direction
of Russian territory, southward towards California, as well as in the
interior of New Caledonia and Oregon. Later, the movement contingent upon
the settlement of Oregon and the determination of the international
boundary, with the political consequences involved therein, will be briefly
outlined.
The first step looking to the extension of the company's
influence northward was taken almost immediately after the establishment of
Fort Vancouver. In 1824, an expedition sent out by McLoughlin made a careful
examination of the shoreward territory lying between the Columbia and the
Fraser; and its members were the first to enter the latter river from the
sea. Before further action was taken, however, the strengthening of
communications with New Caledonia, which, as above noted, had already been
established through Kamloops and Alexandria, required attention. This was
accomplished by the founding of Fort Colville, in 1825-6, on the Upper
Columbia, a post which at once attained importance as a de"p6t for the
surrounding territory and as final place of call for the brigades which,
from this time forward, began to pass regularly eastward from the coast to
Edmonton and Norway House.
After this interlude, McLoughlin turned again to the
north, and Fort Langley was erected on the Lower Fraser in 1827. Langley
therefore represents the earliest occupation of the lower mainland of
British Columbia. The schooner Cadboro which carried the crew and
supplies for the new post was the first sea-going keel to ruffle the Fraser
and the many bays of the neighbouring coast. Langley at once became
important, the more so on account of its excellent salmon fishery. For a
time, also, the trade of the coast northward was conducted through the
Indians alone, with Langley as entrepot.
But competition pressed, that especially of the American
traders; and in 1831 a bold resolve was taken. Fort Simpson was tremblingly
erected at the mouth of the Naas, some hundreds of miles north of Langley.
It arose in the midst of the most treacherous savages known on the coast;
and its occupation became in a peculiar degree a test of military endurance.
It was the outpost for many years of the company's effort to monopolize the
north-west trade.
To occupy the territory between Fort Langley and Fort
Simpson now became the concern of McLoughlin. In 1833, Finlayson, Manson and
Anderson were sent north in the brig Dryad, John Dunn, known as the
author of a history of Oregon, serving as their interpreter. At Millbank
Sound, they were joined by McNeill in the Llama. (As throwing light
upon conditions at this juncture, it may be explained that McNeill's first
appearance on the coast had been as the agent of a Boston company with a
shipload of gewgaws for the Indian trade. These completely outbid the
company's staple commodities, with the result that McLoughlin, to rid
himself of the nuisance, had bought the ship and her cargo outright and
enlisted its captain in the company's service.) In the all but impenetrable
forest that stretched to the water's edge, a space was cleared and a fort
erected, closed in by the usual picket, one hundred and twenty yards square
in this instance, with a height of eighteen feet. Such was Fort McLoughlin.
From the first it was a scene of conflict with the Indians. Manson and
Anderson were left in command, Tolmie succeeding Anderson in 1834 and Manson
being replaced by Charles Ross in 1838. The first circulating library on the
Pacific slope was founded by Tolmie and Manson for the benefit of these
posts. In the same year as Fort McLoughlin, Fort Nis-qually was erected
between Langley and Fort Vancouver, and in 1835 Fort Essington was built to
serve as intermediate station between Forts Simpson and McLoughlin.
With the completion of these operations, the way was
prepared for the inevitable collision with Russia that soon followed. As
early as 1825 the need of a partitionment of interests between Great Britain
and Russia on the north-west coast had been fully appreciated, and had
resulted in the signing of a convention which was destined to affect far
distant and strangely altered times and which therefore is among the most
important episodes in the period at present in review. Under its terms, the
subjects of both governments were free to navigate the Pacific and to trade
with the natives of any shore not already occupied by Europeans. The traders
might land at the posts of their rivals for shelter or repairs, but for no
other reason, unless by express permission. Prince of Wales Island was
established as the southern limit of Russian territory, the island to belong
wholly to Russia. On the mainland, the boundary, after following the channel
of the Portland Canal to the 56th parallel, was to lie along the summits of
the coast range of mountains which it should follow parallel to the shore as
far as longitude 141°. Thence it should run due north to the Arctic Ocean.
Where the summits of the mountains, however, from the 56th parallel
northward should be more than ten marine leagues from the ocean, the
dividing line, it was agreed, should curve with the curving of the shore at
that distance. For ten years the British were granted the right to trade
throughout the Usiere and to the port of Sitka in all save arms,
ammunition, and spirits. To the streams running through the shore-strip to
the ocean, the right was granted in perpetuity. Such was the beginning of
the Alaska boundary question, a matter that was not finally laid to rest
until 1903. The terms were dictated purely by the circumstances of the rival
trading companies, the only value of the coast-strip to the Russians being
that it excluded the British from the trade of the interior. Intercourse was
held at that time by the Russians only with the Indians of the coast, the
latter bartering with the inland tribes at the head of the mountains. Furs
and furs alone were the cause of contention in 1825 ; the land, which in
1903 was the point at issue, was at that time regarded as worthless.
The navigable rivers, it will have been noted, were left
as an avenue by which the British traders might pierce the Russian cordon to
the interior. In 1834, the first attempt to utilize this concession was
made. The most considerable river crossing the strip of land below the 141st
degree was the Stikien. To enter it, traverse the Russian zone, and
establish a post in the hinterland, was the object of an expedition sent
north under Ogden and Anderson in the year mentioned. The party was well
equipped, as befitted one whose mission was the founding of a station able
to support itself a thousand miles from any base of supplies, and to fight
both savages and rivals. But it had apparently reckoned without its host. At
the mouth of the Stikien a Russian blockhouse was encountered, supported by
a corvette and two gunboats to forbid the entrance to the river. The
Russians well appreciated the danger to their trade that lurked in the
designs of the British ; and the alleged sale of firearms and spirits to the
natives was now used by Baron Wrangel, the Russian governor at Sitka, as the
grounds for a request to the imperial government to rescind the clause of
the treaty which gave the British access to the river. Without awaiting a
reply, Wrangel had fortified the Stikien as soon as news of the projected
move of the Hudson's Bay Company reached Sitka. The coast Indians, jealous
of their commerce with the interior tribes, added their refusal to that of
the Russian governor. Heated negotiations were conducted on the spot between
the rivals; but after a delay of a few days the company's ship was put about
and returned to Fort Vancouver, armed with a lengthy protest and bill of
losses for reference to the home government. On the way back, that the
expedition might not be wholly fruitless, Fort Simpson was removed some
forty miles to the south.
The negotiations that followed between Russia and Great
Britain took shape finally in a commission which met in London. As a result,
the shore-strip reservation was leased to the Hudson's Bay Company by Russia
at an annual rental of two thousand land-otter skins. The Stikien post was
handed over ; and permission was given to erect another post still further
northward on the Taku. It was agreed also that the British should supply the
Russians at Sitka with provisions, which the inclemency of northern
latitudes prevented the Russians from raising for themselves. So
satisfactory in the issue did this arrangement prove that it was three times
renewed, while in addition to Fort Taku on the coast, two posts, Mum ford
and Glen-ora, were erected on the Upper Stikien, where they remained until
the advent of the gold-seeker drove the game from the district.
Douglas played a prominent part in directing the events
which ended as above described. Soon after his arrival on the coast he had
revised and greatly improved the system of accounting by which the several
posts of the department made annual returns to Fort Vancouver. At least once
he had been in charge of the York Factory express, a difficult and dangerous
service, the route lying by way of Walla Walla, Colville, and the Athabaska
Pass, to Edmonton, thence to Hudson Bay and return. This was in 1835, the
party consisting of twenty-nine Canadians in three boats, eight months being
consumed in the journey. It was Douglas, also, who, in 1840, was in command
of the party which raised the British flag above Fort Stikien. The mission
was of considerable importance. Rae, Finlayson and the son of McLoughlin,
with fifty men, made up the force. By way of Nisqually and Langley, the
latter being found in ruins from an Indian attack, and passing forts
McLoughlin and Simpson, they steamed in the Beaver to the
headquarters of the company in the leased territory, where the formal act of
transfer was completed. A brave rescue by Douglas of a member of his crew
who had been swept away while fording the icy waters of the Nisqually River
was recorded on this journey. Rae, with eighteen men, was left at Stikien,
and Douglas with the rest passed on to Sitka. Ten days were spent with
Etholin in the final ratification of the agreement. Some words were dropped
as to the purchase of Ross in California, but nothing definite resulted. On
the return from Sitka, Fort Durham, commonly known as Taku, was erected. In
that desolate spot of almost constant rain and snow, and among some of the
wildest natives of the coast, it had a life of only three years. Douglas was
again in charge of the party which dismantled the post. Fort McLoughlin on
Mill-bank Sound was at the same time moved to the head of Vancouver Island
and renamed Fort Rupert. Indian turbulence, here as in no other part of the
company's dominions, constantly menaced its affairs. McLoughlin the younger,
who had followed Rae at Fort Stikien, was shot in 1842, perhaps the most
signal victim of the animosity in the teeth of which the company drove its
northern trade.
With the movement upon Russian trade by way of the sea,
it had been decided to attack from the land as well; and the result was a
series of expeditions in the northern interior of British Columbia that
recall the days of Mackenzie and Fraser. With a courage not less
conspicuous, the company pushed its way into the region of the Upper Liard
and Yukon which the white man had never before seen. The incident belongs in
part to the development of the Mackenzie River Department, and in part to
later history, though it may fitly be mentioned here. On the Liard, the most
wild and dangerous of all the great eastern streams that dash down from the
Rocky Mountains, the earliest post to be established within the confines of
British Columbia was the fort which took its name from the river itself.
Fort Nelson on the eastern branch, was built about the same period, or
shortly after the beginning of the century. Twenty years later, Fort Liard
was pillaged by the Indians and its people murdered. Meanwhile Fort Halkett
had been founded on a higher branch, shortly after the amalgamation of the
rival companies. In 1834, the Upper Liard was ascended by McLeod to its
southern source in Dease Lake. It was not, however, until 1838 that a post
was built in this remote country by a Scotsman named Robert Campbell, the
most distinguished man which the place and period produced, and the last of
the great explorers which the fur trade gave to the western continent.
Ordered to the Mackenzie in 1834, Campbell, after his operations at Dease
Lake, crossed to the Pacific by the Stikien. Here he was taken prisoner by
the Indians. On his escape, after terrible hardships, Fort Dease was burned
to the ground. But it was not until 1840 that Campbell, under orders from
Sir George Simpson, undertook the journey that was to make him famous. This
was the ascent of the northern branch of the Liard through the great gorge
that had previously barred all hope of access to its source, Lake Frances.
After a desperate struggle, Campbell surmounted the barrier, and on Lake
Finlayson, a tributary reservoir, saw the waters divide, part to flow into
the Pacific, part to begin the long journey to the Arctic. Beyond the height
of land he sighted the cliffs of the Pelly. After descending this river a
few miles he turned back. The honour of naming it from himself he refused.
In the following year, with a post on Lake Frances and another on Pelly
Banks as a basis, he again set forth, but was again compelled, this time by
hostile natives, to return, after reaching the point where the junction of
the Lewis and the Pelly forms the great river of Alaska. It was not until
eight years later that Campbell's efforts were crowned with success. On that
occasion, after erecting Fort Selkirk at the mouth of the Lewis, and tracing
the latter to its source, he descended the Yukon several hundred miles to
the junction of the Porcupine, where Fort Yukon, the most remote of the
company's posts, lying one hundred and fifty miles within the Alaska
boundary and on the Arctic Circle, had been built some four years earlier by
the trader Bell. Here Campbell united his own discoveries with those made by
way of the lower and less difficult branches of the Mackenzie. Ascending the
Porcupine and crossing to the Peel, he arrived by way of the Mackenzie at
his original point of departure, Fort Simpson on the Liard. He had traversed
in that great circle over three thousand miles of river and mountain; he had
mapped a huge region which before had been wholly unknown; and he had given
a lasting impetus to the trade inland in the direction of the Russian
competitor; all with a forgetfulness of self that was only equalled by the
splendid courage and endurance which the achievement demanded.
In California, the endeavour of the company to secure a
foothold, while Fort Vancouver remained the entrepot of the department, was
extended over sixteen years. The descendants of the Spaniards, who now held
the country after throwing off the yoke of Spain, had neither the enterprise
to establish trade nor the inclination to foster it by government. Fish and
furs, in small quantities only, found an outlet through Mexico.
Nevertheless, the efforts of Russia, England, and the United States, to
establish trading-posts in the south, met with fierce opposition. The first
attempt of the Hudson's Bay Company to invade California was before 1830,
the valleys of the Sacramento and San Joaquin having at an early date
attracted the attention of McLoughlin. A party sent to the assistance of the
American trader Jedidiah Smith, who, on crossing from Salt Lake in 1827-8,
had been roughly handled by the Indians and had lost a convoy of furs,
penetrated as far as the Umpqua. A second expedition, under Ogden, reached
the Sacramento River, and in 1835 the company established a post at the
junction of the Sacramento and Jesus Maria. A few years served to exhaust
the furs of these outlying districts, and, with the desire to reach still
further southward, a collision with Mexico became inevitable. At this
contingency, Douglas was sent in charge of a party to treat with the Mexican
governor. Sailing from Fort Vancouver, December 3rd, 1840, on the ship
Columbia, with a crew of thirty-six and a cargo of miscellaneous goods,
he cast anchor at Monterey on New Year's Day, 1841. The design of the voyage
was largely political, but the crew had been increased by stockmen who were
to drive northward a supply of cattle. The negotiations with the governor
lasted until January 19th. Douglas undertook to check the operations of the
company in the Tulare and outlying valleys, and in return obtained a
temporary relaxation of the law which confined the coastwise trade to
Mexican bottoms, together with the important right for the company to trade
in California by express sanction of the government. Fifty cents, it was
agreed, should be paid by the company for each beaver skin taken. San
Francisco was immediately visited with a view to an establishment, not
without friction with rival traders; and Douglas was back in Fort Vancouver
by the following May. Rae, the son-in-law of McLoughlin, was recalled from
the Stikien and appointed to the new post, which was situated on Yerba Buena
Cove, in the Bay of San Francisco. Simpson, then on his famous voyage around
the world, and McLoughlin as chief factor, visited the post soon after. For
two years the record of the company's transactions was the history of San
Francisco, and its servants made up almost the entire population. With the
interior a steady trade in supplies sprang up. But the scale of profits from
the first was below the expectation of the company. Rae fell ill, and in
1845 committed suicide. Forbes took over the control; but the governor had
already decided, against the judgment of McLoughlin, to abandon the post.
The end came in 1846, when the company sold the establishment at Yerba Buena
and retired forever from San Francisco Bay.
These vigorous efforts of the company in the outlying
regions of the department were accompanied by developments in the immediate
neighbourhood of Fort Vancouver which were of even greater importance. The
agreement with the Russians relative to the supplying of provisions had been
fraught with far-reaching consequences. From the first, McLoughlin, in spite
of prejudice to the contrary, had recognized the agricultural possibilities
of Oregon. The mild and equable climate and the depth and richness of the
soil tempted a diversity and luxuriance of growth that invited the most
unwilling to husbandry. In the open spaces about Fort Vancouver axe and
plough were set to work, and corn and live-stock reared. Sheep were brought
from California, hogs from the Sandwich Islands, and cattle from Ross. Soon
a flour mill worked by oxen was set up. Grist and sawmills followed on the
Willamette. Horse breeding for the brigades became extensive. By 1835, some
thirty-five hundred feet of lumber were being sawn daily; while the yield of
grain was annually several thousands of bushels, and the number of animals
constantly on hand several hundreds. By these activities the company was
saved the expense of bringing supplies through the mountains or around Cape
Horn. The growing of grain was still a mere auxiliary to the trade in
peltries, and while it remained so the inherent incompatibility of the two
was not apparent. In a land of abundance, however, the supply soon exceeded
the local demand. Flour and lumber from the Columbia began to seek a market
in the Pacific Islands. Salmon was shipped to Boston and London. With the
Russian treaty, and the stimulus which it immediately gave to farming on the
Columbia, this new phase was accentuated. The first intimation had been
given, to those who could understand, of the final destiny of the region.
Fur-trading and settled industry cannot live together. The company knew this
full well. But, as it could not alter the decree of nature, its primary
concern in the situation was one of organization merely— the keeping of the
two divisions of its activity separate, now that the industrial branch gave
promise of attaining large proportions.
To have charge of the important commercial and
agricultural interests of the company, a separate body was deemed necessary.
The formation of a cattle association by some settlers on the Willamette
pointed the way; and in 1838-9, McLoughlin obtained the sanction of the
directors to the organization of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company. The
new undertaking was brought into being under the immediate auspices of the
Hudson's Bay Company, which furnished nearly all the original shareholders.
It was officered from the staff of the parent body; and it was expressly
forbidden to deal in furs. On the other hand the Hudson's Bay Company handed
over all its cattle, sheep, horses and farming implements to it and
renounced husbandry forever in Oregon. The rich and level region which lay
about Nisqually and between Puget Sound and the headwaters of the Cowlitz, a
branch of the Columbia which joins the latter about fifty miles from the
ocean, offered a favourable field for the rearing of flocks and herds and
the production of wool, hides and tallow. Farms were also opened on the
Willamette. McLoughlin was appointed the first manager; skilled farmers and
shepherds were brought from Canada and England; and the company was finally
inaugurated in 1840, with a capital of £200,000 in £100 shares. Of this
capital, however, no more than £16,160 were found to have been paid up at
the time the company's affairs were finally settled.
It would seem that the enterprise suffered almost from
the start from a variety of opposing circumstances. Into the history of its
chequered career it is unnecessary here to enter, lying as the period does
some years in advance of the time at present under discussion. The adoption
of the 49th parallel as the international boundary, in 1846, under
circumstances to be explained further on, was a blow from which the company
never attempted to recover. Its men deserted for the free lands of the
homesteader; the natives destroyed its stock ; while the technical
differences between "possessions" and "possessory rights" under the boundary
treaty, were a source of perpetual dispute between the companies and the
United States. An offer was finally made to sell all rights and titles to
the United States for $1,000,000. This was not accepted, and the friction
continued. Again, in 1860, it was intimated, through the British ambassador
at Washington, that the sum of $500,000 would be accepted by Great Britain
on behalf of the companies, and would release the United States from all
engagements under the treaty. The company, however, maintained its position
until the year 1867, hoping that by continuing in business, though at a
loss, it would make good its case against the United States. In the year
mentioned, a commission was appointed by which the various claims were at
last determined. Those of the Hudson's Bay Company were settled for
$450,000; those of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company, for $200,000. It
was discovered by the commission that the latter body was indebted to the
parent company in the sum of £25,000, and that except at intervals it had
not paid a profit to the shareholders. The highest dividend declared was ten
per cent., and this was continued for five years only, 1848-53. The last
dividend paid was in 1854; it amounted to five per cent. The Hudson's Bay
Company had an interest as purchaser in one thousand three hundred and
eighty-six shares issued at par. In 1853, the company claimed one hundred
and sixty-seven thousand acres at Nisqually, eighty thousand acres of which
were prairie land. At Cowlitz, it claimed three thousand six hundred acres.
In 1856, according to Tolmie, it had seven hundred and forty acres fenced at
Nisqually. Of its operations on Vancouver Island there will be mention
later.
McLoughlin, the first manager of the Puget Sound
Agricultural Company, was succeeded on his retirement by Douglas, who also
severed his connection with the company in the year 1859, upon his
acceptance of the governorship of the colonies of Vancouver Island and
British Columbia.
One incident in connection with the agricultural
operations of the company may be noted in passing. In 1829, when the soil
about Fort Vancouver was first upturned, a fearful epidemic of fever and
ague broke out. The whites suffered severely, but the Indians fell by
thousands. Typhoid, whooping-cough and measles soon after made their first
appearance. In 1833 a hospital which had been erected on the Columbia had
from two to three hundred cases as its usual number.
Over many stirring events that had their centre in Fort
Vancouver, during the period in which it dominated the life of the coast,
this summary must pass in silence. The narration might be made to include
several daring expeditions into forest and wilderness, such, for example, as
that which Work led in 1834 far into the wilds of Oregon, past the
headwaters of the Willamette, to the buffalo country of the Missouri; or
that of Ermatinger in 1841 to the Sacramento; or that which founded in 1832
Fort Umpqua on the route between Fort Vancouver and San Francisco
Bay,—almost the only post attempted by the company for purposes of general
trade south of the Columbia. Much space, too, might be given to the internal
development of the company, and to the life that sprang up on the Columbia,
which under McLoughlin was perhaps more striking than that in any other part
of the company's domain. But the tree had no sooner achieved vigorous growth
than it withered before the changed conditions which came with the advent of
the agriculturist from the United States. To the important series of events
that ended in the permanent establishment of the United States in Oregon,
involving the settlement of the boundary between British and American
territory, the extinction of the fur trade between the Columbia and the 49th
parallel, and the removal of the company's headquarters from Fort Vancouver
to Victoria, the rest of this chapter will be devoted. As before, Douglas
was the close spectator, if not the actual director, of almost every move
that was taken, having risen to the rank of chief trader in 1832 and of
chief factor in 1840, and becoming in later years the forefront of the
opposition offered by the English company to what it soon had to acknowledge
was the decree of fate.
Prior to 1830, the first to cross the Rockies from the
United States to Oregon, since the days of the Astorians, was Jedidiah
Smith, who, with a band of fellow trappers, entered the Snake River country
in 1825. Since the War of 1812, it should be explained, Astoria had been in
the possession of the United States under an arrangement with Great Britain
by which the country from the Mexican frontier for an indeterminate distance
northward was held in joint sovereignty. More concerning this arrangement
will appear later on. From that time forward the possibility of the
settlement of Oregon by agriculturists had been debated from time to time in
congress; but the awful perils of the journey overland and the conflicting
information as to the value of the country itself led to no active result.
Meanwhile, as we know, McLoughlin had installed the rule of the Hudson's Bay
Company at Fort Vancouver and had taken virtual possession of the territory
north and south. Smith was a lieutenant of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company,
which the enterprise of the trader Ashley had made famous in the great
interior of the continent, and which was the first to re-establish
commercial communications between the United States and the territories west
of the Rocky Mountains. Since the dissolution of the Pacific Fur Company the
trade of the Upper Mississippi and the Missouri had been carried on by the
North American Fur Company, at the head of which Astor remained, while in
1822 the Columbia Fur Company was formed, for operation in the same field,
from recruits from the North-West Company who were dissatisfied with the
terms of the amalgamation of 1821. Smith, after crossing twice to the
Pacific and ranging throughout Northern California, was killed by Indians in
1829, but not before he had led the first train of waggons from the east to
the base of the Rocky Mountains. Sporadic expeditions followed under the
command of Pilcher of the North American Company, Pattie of a Missouri
concern, and others to whom these operations acted as a spur ; but until
Bonneville and Wyeth came, direct collision with the Hudson's Bay Company
was avoided. Smith in fact, as has been noted, owed his fortune, almost his
life, on one occasion, to the English company, and gratitude may have found
a place even in the breasts of warring fur traders. Bonneville, a Frenchman
by birth and a captain of the United States army, having obtained in 1831 a
furlough of two years, led a band of one hundred men and twenty waggons from
the Missouri to the Columbia, where he spent two years in unsuccessful
contention with rival enterprises, and returned having lost all. The
expeditions of Wyeth of Massachusetts, made about the same time as that of
Bonneville, were conceived in more serious vein, but met with scarcely
greater success. Two posts were founded but were almost immediately driven
out by the competition of the Hudson's Bay Company. Kelly, a Boston school
teacher and an enthusiast in religion and politics, had the merit of
attracting attention to Oregon by an extravagant scheme of colonization, in
attempting to realize which he passed through extreme hardships in
California and was rescued in the end from his suffering by the Hudson's Bay
Company, against which, however, he continued to entertain to the last an
implacable hatred. Unsettled in mind as he was, Kelly was nevertheless the
first to declare the feasibility of overland emigration from the United
States to the Pacific, and, in writings poured forth for over a quarter of a
century, to induce ultimately some trial of the undertaking which was to
prove the true solution of the country's future.
By sea, during the year 1829, the ships Convoy and
Owyhee, both of Boston, attempted to open trade with the natives of
the Columbia. After a year's stay on the coast, the vessels took their
departure and were seen in these waters no more. The Owyhee was
reputed to have brought the first peach trees planted in Oregon and to have
carried thence the first Columbia salmon to reach the Boston markets.
But the most potent factor in the permanent settlement of
Oregon was the coming of the missionaries. The period was the third decade
of the century. The movement had its origin in an incident, striking as it
was touching. About the time of Wyeth's first expedition, there had appeared
at St. Louis five Indians of the Nez Perce's tribe who, having heard of the
white man's God and His book, had come to ask that men be sent to teach
their people concerning them. The story of their quest found its way into
the press and was re-echoed throughout the churches of the land. To one
Jason Lee, a Methodist preacher, the call came as from Macedonia of old.
With his nephew Daniel Lee and three lay brethren, he joined the second
expedition of Wyeth which was at the moment embarking on its perilous march.
In July 1834, Lee preached his first sermon in Oregon. With McLoughlin's
aid, he planted his first mission on the Willamette, where a few retired
servants of the company had already, by permission, established themselves
and were employed chiefly in herding cattle. The mission soon became the
nucleus of a permanent colony drawing recruits continuously from beyond the
mountains. It was the first settlement of United States citizens on the
Columbia having other than a commercial object in view. Before another year
had elapsed, Lee was followed by the Presbyterian missionaries Parker and
Whitman, the latter being joined by his wife. Spaulding and Gray came in
1836. The tribes of the Upper Columbia were now evangelized, Whitman
settling in the valley of the Walla Walla and Spaulding in the Nez Perce's
country, and still further knowledge of the country was distributed in the
Eastern States. Whitman, especially, from the moment of his arrival in
Oregon, was untiring in his agitation for the inclusion of the country in
the United States territory; and his establishment among the Cayuses soon
formed a gateway through the mountains for the straggling lines of the
settlers, which from this time forward, as a result largely of his efforts,
began to flow in ever-increasing numbers from the east to the Columbia.
Whitman's famous ride from Oregon to Washington over the snow, in 1843, that
he might superintend the immigration of the following year, is the most
stirring deed of the whole movement. He returned with a thousand people.
Schools for the education of the natives were opened ; and in 1839 a
printing press was set up at Walla Walla on which were struck off the first
sheets ever printed on the Pacific slope of America north of Mexico. The
Jesuit missionaries, who came in 1838 from Canada, penetrated throughout the
region, but had little effect on immigration.
To notice in detail the various steps by which the
intermittent bands of settlers attracted by the missionaries to Oregon
swelled into a great national movement ending in the occupation of the
country by the United States, would be beyond the scope of the present
chapter. Disconnected and unimportant at first, the different strands were
in a measure gathered into a self-conscious whole in 1837, with the
formation in the United States of the first societies for the promotion of
emigration to Oregon. From that time forward the inflow was continuous,
gathering volume with time. Perhaps no better view of the varied nature of
the movement and of the manner in which its different constituents were
intermingled, is obtainable than that presented by the following extracts
from a document prepared by McLoughlin himself: "This year," he writes, with
reference to 1836, "the people in the Willamette formed a party and went by
sea with Mr. Slacum to California for cattle, and returned in 1837 with two
hundred and fifty head. In 1836, the Rev. Mr. Leslie and family, accompanied
by the Rev. Mr. Perkins, another single man, and a single woman, came by sea
to reinforce the Methodist Mission. In 1837 a bachelor and five single women
also came by sea to reinforce the Methodist Mission; and three Presbyterian
ministers came across land with their families, while their supplies came by
sea. Two of these missionaries settled in the vicinity of Colville, the
other in the Nez Perce's country. In 1838, two Roman Catholic missionaries
came from Canada. This year the Rev. Mr. Griffin of the Presbyterian Church,
with his wife, came across land from the States by way of the Snake country.
There came with him also a layman of the name of Munger, and his wife ....
In 1839 a party left the state of Illinois, headed by Mr. Farnham, with the
intention of exploring the country and reporting to their countrymen who had
sent them. Four only reached this place. Three remained, Mr. Farnham
returning to the States by sea and publishing an account of his travels.
Messrs. Geiger and Johnson came this year, sent, as they said, by people in
the States to examine the country and report. Johnson left by sea and never
returned. Geiger went as far as California and returned here by land .... In
1840, the Rev. Mr. Clark of the Presbyterian Church with his wife, and two
laymen with their wives, came across land on the self-supporting system,
but, as their predecessors, they failed, and are now settled on the
Willamette. In 1840, the Rev. Mr. Jason Lee, who had gone in 1838 across
land to the United States, returned by sea in the Lausanne, Capt.
Spaulding, with a reinforcement of fifty-two persons, ministers and laymen,
women and children, for the Methodist Mission, and a large supply of goods
with which the Methodist Mission opened a sale shop. In 1841, the American
exploring squadron, under Captain Wilkes, surveyed the Columbia River from
the entrance to the Cascades, and sent a party across land from Puget Sound
to Colville and Walla Walla, and another from Vancouver to California. At
the same time the Thomas Perkins, Captain Varney, of Boston, entered
the Columbia River for the purpose of trade. . . .
"In the spring, the Rev. Father De Smet of the Society of
Jesus came to Vancouver from the Flat Head country where the year before he
had established a mission from St. Louis. He came for supplies, with which
he returned to his mission. In August, the Rev. Messrs. Langlois and Bolduc
came by sea. In the month of September, one hundred and thirty-seven men,
women, and children arrived from the States. They came with their waggons to
Fort Hall, and thence packed their effects on horses and drove their cattle.
... In the fall, eight hundred and seventy-five men, women, and children
came from the States by the same route as last year, bringing one thousand
three hundred head of cattle. These came to The Dalles, on the Columbia
River, with their waggons, drove their cattle over the Cascades by the same
route as those of last year to the Willamette, and when the road was blocked
by snow proceeded along the north bank of the Columbia to Vancouver, where
they crossed the river to the Willamette, bringing down their wives,
children, and property, on rafts, in canoes which they hired from the
Indians, and in boats belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, lent them by
me......The Rev. Father Deros [Demers] of the Society of Jesus, came this
year with two other fathers of the same society and three laymen and
established a mission in the Colville district. Lieutenant Fremont, of the
United States service, came with a party to examine the country. After
purchasing supplies from the Hudson's Bay Company, he rejoined his party at
The Dalles, and proceeded across land to California. In 1844, the immigrants
amounted to one thousand four hundred and seventy-five men, women and
children. They came by the same route and were assisted by me with the loan
of boats, as their predecessors of last year........The Belgian brig,
Indefatigable, also anchored there. She was the only vessel that
hitherto came under that flag, and brought the Rev. Father De Smet, with
four fathers of the Society of Jesus, and five Belgian nuns of the Society
of Sisters of Our Lady. The fathers came to reinforce their mission in the
interior in the Flat Head country and to establish others, and the nuns to
build a convent and open a school for young females in the Willamette."
Data for ascertaining the numbers that came across the
plains to Oregon, from the year 1840 until the fixing of the international
boundary, are incomplete and unsatisfactory. It has been estimated that at
the close of 1841 there were in the neighbourhood of four hundred citizens
of the United States in Oregon. For 1842, the estimates range, on good
authority, from one hundred and five to one hundred and thirty-seven
immigrants; while in the following year not less than eight hundred and
seventy-five to one thousand came into the country. The number fell to seven
hundred in 1844, but rose to three thousand in 1845, during the period that
immediately preceded the final settlement of the controversy between Great
Britain and the United States concerning the boundary. In 1846, the movement
again fell off", this time to about one thousand three hundred and fifty.
The climax of the movement, in a political sense, came in
1844. From the time of the missionaries, the influx had taken on the
characteristics of a great national propaganda for the annexation of Oregon
to the United States. The settler conveyed a clearer title to the soil than
the fur trader; the settler, therefore, under the existing conditions was a
patriot as well. Of the intricacies of the debate between Great Britain and
the United States concerning the division of Oregon, some review will be
given later; it is sufficient here to advert to the political significance
of the immigration movement and to the fact that this significance was
understood by every one who took part in it. By 1844, enough strength had
been gathered for a definite declaration of policy on the spot. Political
organization of some sort had, moreover, become expedient. A provisional
government was accordingly erected on the Willamette, representative
entirely of the American element—for the British held aloof— and established
on the understanding that it would exist only until the United States
extended its jurisdiction to the country. It had an executive of three and a
legislature of eight. It passed several laws; but the bowie knife and pistol
remained the most effective engines in bringing delinquents to justice. For
two years the unique experiment was continued, until the treaty of 1846
erected Oregon into a territory of the American union.
A word may be added with regard to the course observed by
the Hudson's Bay Company towards the settlers from the United States. It was
indeed a difficult situation; on the one hand, suffering men and
women, the terrible passage of the plains having left nearly all the earlier
settlers in a state of destitution and defencelessness; on the other, the
loss of the country to the trade. Yet there can be no doubt that to
missionaries and immigrants alike the attitude of the company was one of
kindness and hospitality. How much of this was due to McLoughlin is a
question hard to answer. The significance of the influx was never
misunderstood; and if upon McLoughlin the bitterness of the losing battle
fell, the fact remains that when Douglas succeeded to his place no change in
policy followed. Perhaps it was then too late; though in any event the
movement was irresistible from the first. To rival traders, of course, no
quarter was given; they were fought with every weapon which the wealth and
long experience of the company had placed in its hand, and with unvarying
success. Ingratitude on the part of those who had received its bounty is
hard to account for. Yet it is a fact that the ill-will which McLoughlin
incurred from the company for befriending the settlers, excused as it might
be by the heavy losses sustained through the policy which he had adopted,
was more than equalled by the hatred with which he was pursued by some of
those whom he had rescued from death in its most terrible forms, whom he had
fed, clothed, and supplied with the means of obtaining a livelihood, and for
whom he risked his own future with the company. Political passion alone can
account for this perversion. A year before the Oregon boundary had been
finally determined, McLoughlin, the picturesque and admirable, the "great
white eagle" of the Pacific slope, had been forced from his command; and
Douglas, more rigid in his obedience, though no more able, as it proved, to
stem the tide, ruled in his stead.
Such, in outline, was the nature of the movement which,
by peopling the country south of the Columbia with a race that tilled the
soil, drove out the hunter and the trapper, its discoverer and first
occupant. In this way was solved the vexed problem of sovereignty in Oregon.
Thenceforward the vast hiatus between the Alleghanies and the Rockies was
bridged by the tie of a common nationality at either end; and the foot of
the republic was planted firmly once and for all on the shores of the
Pacific. With the year 1846, the British frontier was moved back to the 49th
parallel, except for the portion of Vancouver Island which lay below that
line and for the possessory rights which the Hudson's Bay Company and others
retained in the Columbia valley, Britain having maintained throughout that
the Columbia formed the proper boundary between the countries. Fort
Vancouver remained until 1849 as a post of the company; but the glory had
departed. Coming events had cast their shadow before; and the removal of the
boundary did not find the company unprepared. Three years before the final
settlement, a fort had been established within the shelter of the new lines,
to inherit the prestige of Vancouver as the company's emporium on the
Pacific, and to form the nucleus of the new political and social life that
was to spring up with the definite determination of the national frontier.
This was Victoria on Vancouver Island, founded by James Douglas in 1843. The
event and its immediate results were of such importance, both to the fur
trade and the country, as to merit a chapter to themselves. Before
approaching this part of the subject, however, it will be of interest to
describe more fully that famous controversy between Great Britain and the
United States concerning the Oregon boundary, some further reference to
which is necessary in immediate connection with the foregoing, and of which
the establishment of Victoria, though forestalling it in point of time, was
largely in the nature of a result. |