The minutes approve of Douglas’s steps and submit his report with other British Columbia papers for parliament.
Enclosed is a draft reply from Lytton to Douglas informing him that the HBC has been notified of the revocation of their license in the colony; and Carnarvon to Berens informing him of the revocation of the HBC license.
3. Capt Parsons with the first Detachment of Royal
Engineers also accompanied me from this place, Captain Grant
with the second detachmentand and also Inspector Brew having
preceeded me by a few days.
4. The ceremony was performed at Fort Langley with
becoming solemnity on the 19th inst. in the presence
of these Gentlemen, Her Majesty's Troops, and the inhabitants
of the place, and the officers holding appointments from Her
Majesty were installed in the usual manner, and with the
accustomed forms.
5. Proclamations were then made
1st of the Revocation by Her Majesty of allthe the
exclusive privileges of the Hudson's Bay
Company.
2
2nd Indemnifying the Officers of Government from
all irregularities previous to the proclamation of the
act.
3
3rd Proclaiming English Law to be the Law of the
Colony.
4
6. Copies of those Proclamations are herewith transmitted
for the information of Her Majesty's Government.
7. I returned to this place on the 21st of inst. with
Rear Admiral Baynes and all the other Gentlemen who accompaniedme
me to Fort Langley, except Inspector Brew and Captain's Grant
and Parsons who were left with the Royal Engineers at old Fort Langley.
Mr Merivale
Signify approval of the steps taken by the Governor for the
inauguration of the Colony of B. Columbia.
Apprize the Hudson's Bay Co of the fact of the revocation
of their License in the Colony having been promulgated there on the
[blank].
Communicate to Parlt with the other papers which are in
preparation for that object.
It would, I think, be very desirable that all the B. Columbia
papers which are to be given to Parlt should be placed
immediately in the hands of the Parliamentary Clerk as
an early account of what H.M. Govt have done in the matter
will enhance the good effect, which I trust will be produced
on the public, when the details in the establishment of this
new Colony are known.
The Beaver, one of British Columbia's best-known steamships, was a
wooden sidewheeler, 100' 9" x 20 ' x 11', built for the Hudson's Bay
Company by Green, Wigrams and Green, in Blackwall, England and launched
in May 1835. It arrived at Fort Vancouver in April 1836 and was used by
the company until 1874, when it was sold to ?? for ?? The
ship was wrecked at Prospect Point in Burrard Inlet in July 1888. For
a history of the ship's construction and arrival in the colony, see W.
Kaye Lamb, The Advent of the 'Beaver',BCHQ 2 (1938): 163-84.
= Proclamation, 19 Nov 58, HBC license
Revocation of license of 30th May, 1838, to Hudson's Bay Company, for Exclusive Trading with Indigenous peoples, in so far as the same embraces the
Territories comprised in British Columbia, 3 November 1858, in Revised Statutes of British Columbia 1871, Appendix, pp. 228-29).
Cf fn in Douglas to Lytton, 26 October 1858, No. 6, 12724, CO 60/1, p. 245.
= Proclamation, 19 Nov 58, Indemnification
Proclamation having the Force of Law to indemnify the Governor and
other Officers for Acts done before the Establishment of any Legitimate
Authority in British Columbia, 19 November 1858, in
Revised Statutes of British Columbia 1871, Appendix, pp. 230-31).
Proclamation Having the Force of Law to Declare that English Law
Is in Force in British Columbia, 19 November 1858, British Columbia,
List of Proclamations. Or in Papers?? Delete from 7016, ??