Correspondence (private letter).
Minutes (2), Other documents (1), Marginalia (1).
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often perpetuate a negative perspective of Indigenous Peoples and it is important
to look critically at these mentions. They sometimes use terminology that is now considered
hurtful and offensive. To learn more about modern terminology pertaining to Indigenous
Peoples, Indigenous ways of knowing, and decolonization, please refer to the Glossary of terms.
Having examined the Sierra Nevada range of Mountains
in California for many months, and being acquainted with
the physical formation of that district I beg most
respectfully to offer to your polite notice a few observations
relative to the same range of Mountains running through
British Columbia which has proved as rich in mineral wealth
as my letter of May last addressed to Her Majesty's Government
had suggested.
May I now be allowed to submit for your kind consideration
some few facts that I think would be useful to that Colony, and
also of great advantage to the Mother Country.
I would
I would in the First place submit that the Plascier [Placer]
Mining & Diggings should be at liberty to be worked by all
parties going to the Colony, upon any arrangement that the
Colonial Government might think most fit to adopt. These will
be found to be as extensive and rich, as those in California,
and will take hundreds of years to work out.
Secondly. That the Government should reserve to itself
the rights of working the Quartz Leads.
This would in no way interfere with the Plascier
workings, but in "Prospecting" for which, good workings would
be discovered as a matter of course near to the Quartz Leads,
as they are the parent Deposits of the Gold found in the vallies,
and without them no metal could exist in the earthy matter;
commonly called "the diggings."
Permit me to take the liberty of explaining how the
formations in these Mountains exist.
The whole
The whole of the West Coast of North America, is a
more recent formation than Australia, and this is quite
evident by the Water-washed Boulders and Shells found on
the Mountains many hundred feet above the level of the Sea,
and also that the Quartz Veins are much less worn, and
the deposit in the Vallies not nearly so deep to the Bed Rock,
as in Australia, where all the Quartz Veins are more depressed,
and the depth of the earth above the Bed rock uniformly much greater.
In examining this range of Mountains; I found the crests
of the hills were more or less charged with Cinnabar; and
this dark reddish substance at[t]racts the suns rays and becomes
extremely heated during the whole of the summer which lasts
for eight months; and when the rain comes, a large quantity
of this is liberated and is washed down and passing over the
Quartz Veins, removes any portion of Gold that may be on the
surface, is in the top crevises of the Quartz, and takes the
same into the vallies and rivers below, where the metal rests.
Thus, I have known thebed Bed of one river washed, with good
results for four years in succession, the Gold having been
replenished by each winters rain. The Quartz Veins of this
range, I believe to be larger and of greater continuation than
any at present discovered. I have traced one for Eighteen
and a half Miles, and at the highest point it was more than
Twelve hundred feet above the bed of the rivers through which
it passed, and in no place less that Nine feet wide, but to what
depth it went, it is impossible to conjecture. I have no doubt
that I should have been able to have traced it into the perpetual
Snow, had I have been able to have continued my search, but my
men got alarmed about the Indians, and I was compelled to abandon
my further investigation of this enormous Bank of treasure, where
I frequently found visable gold. I left two of my men to Drive
in upon it at Eighty two feet below the out crop, and I found it
equally good or rather better in its appearance than at the
surface. To give you some view of the richness of this Vein,
I need only mention that in one season the firm of Messrs
Palmer Coutt & Co. obtained from some veryrough rough workings,
and poor appliances, enough wealth to start their Bank at San Francisco.
The Quartz of this range is much more easily worked than
the matrix of that class, which I have found in other parts
of the world, and is uniformly richer, and likewise contains
less of foreign substances, there being generally very little
else than Iron intermixed; and without which gold cannot exist.
I would propose that the Government should work the
Quartz Veins for its own benefit, and this would yield very
large returns; and not only pay all the expences of the
local Government, but would help the Mother Country to pay
off her National Debt, and therefore like a good child, help
her aged parent with her pecuniary assistance to any amount
that she required.
[Only] if the Colony would let us.
Beside the Quartz Leads that will be discovered in the
continuation of the Sierra Nevada, I would respectfully call
attention to the Gold found in Queen Charlottes Island in
Latitude 53° 1 1/2 North, Longitude 131° 49 West.
This is a Greenstone formation; in which the Gold is
granulated and very rich. The Bluff in which it is
reposited stands errect out of the seaand the and the well
mearly requires blasting down, as in a Stone Quarry. This
would yield largely and would pay enormously to work, as it
could be blasted and ship[p]ed on the spot, and be brought
down to Victoria, or wherever the Government works may be
determined on, and the reduction of this matrix is so
extremely simple, that the advantage to the Crown would be greater
than I dare venture to state. I brought specimens of this well to
England at the close of the year 1852, as also some of the
granulated Gold.
I need lastly call your kind attention to the fact of the
great amount of wealth that Russia derives from her works
on the Orel Mountains, and which I believe is her only source
of mineral treasure.
I have found Californian Quartz which has yielded more
than Sixty ounces of Gold to the ton of Quartz (and can
produce some that I have by me now,) and, this from many parts
of the same Vein; and I have seen even richer material than this.
I should be most happy [to] show Her Majesty's Government, a
very cheap and certain method of obtaining the Gold from the
matrix, and which could be proved in this country from
Quartz to be obtained fromWales Wales, Ireland or Scotland, and
I would undertake to make the trials of the same before
them, and show them how it can be done. In fact any
gentleman might do it himself under my direction.
Such Quartz working would not at all infringe on the
"Miners claims" and could but be popular in the Colony, and
must be more so in this country.
And Thirdly. That the Government should establish a Mint
in the Colony, as soon as convenient, and thereby gain all the
advantages of the Gold discovery.
I do not know if I have made myself understood as I
am rather a bad hand at descriptive writing being more an
operative, than a pen and ink man, but perhaps my poor
attempt may be sufficiently plain for your powerful mind
to perceive my meaning and should these few hints be deemed
worthy [of] your kind notice, I shall be most happy to give
any further explanation, either personally or otherwise,
to any interrogatories you may please to make.
I have the honor to be Sir
Edward With muchWith much respect
Your most obedient humble
Servant, Jackson Barwise
14 Alexander Street Westbourne Park W.
August 28th 1858
Minutes by CO staff
I have seen the writer of this Letter two or three times. He is
a most intelligent practical man—& is a Surveyor for some line of
Railroad which is in course of construction in California. He is an
Englishman.