“In the absence of any definite information respecting the
Aborigines’ Protection Society, of which I am informed you are the Secretary, I write to ask you whether your
Society can be induced to take up the cause of the Indians in this colony, who stand deplorably
in need of assistance. As you are probably aware, this colony was little more than
a series of Hudson-Bay fur trading forts, until
1858, when the discoveries of gold upon
Fraser River brought it into more prominence as a gold country. I need not enter into the history
of the colony further than to remind you that the two adjacent colonies of
Vancouver Island and the mainland of
British Columbia are, since
1867, united into the one colony of
British Columbia, with a Governor and Legislative Council, of whom two-thirds are nominated by the
Governor.
“I have myself been here over seven years, and having originally settled in one of
the country districts (
Cowichan), in the very heart of Indian tribes, and after some months’ experience there, having
been forced to throw up my land rather than expose my wife to what I considered danger
from the proximity of Indians, burning under an acute sense of unfair treatment on
the part of the Colonial Government, and having, since my return to this city, for
upwards of five years practised my profession of attorney in the Supreme and other
Courts of the colony, I have had ample opportunities of observing the way in which
Indians are treated. We have, I regret to say, no Indian policy whatever: there are
no Indian agents, and the only friends that the Indians have in the colony are the
Missionaries, who are, however, almost powerless for want of government assistance.
Each Governor has, in turn, treated the Indians differently; one making them amenable
to the English laws, another suffering them to shoot and kill one another within rifle-shot
of the city, without interference. In
1862, after a considerable influx of white population,
the district of Cowichan was thrown open for settlement, and the Indians were promised remuneration in money,
or blankets for the land which was taken from them, a reserve was set apart for them,
and every sort of assistance and protection was promised them. They have
never been paid for their land, their reserve has
not been kept intact, and they have
no sort of protection extended to them: on the contrary, the law prohibiting the sale of
liquor to Indians is set at defiance by infamous white men, who take care that it
is worth while for the police to fail to see their misdeeds, and the Indians are supplied
with a compound of coal oil, nicotine and fusil oil, which leads them to the commission
of all sorts of crimes, and is rapidly killing them off. I do
not say that the Government takes no steps to enforce the law, but I
do say that I could point to at least a dozen men known to be engaged in this nefarious
traffic, and making their living thereby. The wives and daughters of two of the tribes
who have their location nearest to the city are positively solde for the purposes
of prostitution, which is carried on to a frightful extent. Last summer the city was
visited by the scourge of small-pox, which carried off hundreds of Indians. Out of
one hundred and three cases which happened to come within
my personal knowledge, but three recovered. The provisions made by the authorities
for the protection of the Indians during the prevalence of this frightful scourge
were infamously bad. After numbers of deaths had occurred, the sum of ten dollars
was expended in the erection of a tent, open at the sides, to which the poor creatures
were taken from the town in carts, and left to die or recover as chance, and the negligence
of a deserter from the American army, hired as their attendant, would have it. Hundreds
of bodies were left on the rocks outside the harbour unburied, and you can imagine
how disease was fostered by such a course of proceeding. Again, as regards the trial
of Indians accused of crime, their defence is a mere matter of chance: if they happen
to have money, they in most cases retain counsel; if not, sometimes the Court assigns
them counsel, but then it is only after the prisoner is arraigned and has pleaded,
and counsel knows nothing of the man, and has no opportunity of learning anything
about the case. The Missionaries have but little assistance from the Government. In
fact, to judge from the policy adopted of letting Indian affairs take their chance,
it would seem that our Government was following the example of America, and trying
to exterminate the Indian race. If your Society would establish an office here, or
appoint an agent to whom Indians might apply at all times for assistance, it would
make a great difference.
"No institution is more specifically defined among the Ahts than that of slavery.
It has probably existed in these tribes for a long time, as many of the slaves have
a characteristic mean appearance, and the word slave
is used commonly as a term of reproach. — p. 89.
The slave is at the absolute disposal of his master in all things.
“A master sometimes directs a slave, on pain of death, to kill an enemy, and the
slave dares not again appear in the presence of his master without the head of the
person. The case in this instance is one in which — native evidence being excluded
by the working of the British criminal law as administered in
Vancouver Island — the slave would be put to death, while the chief, who cares nothing for a slave’s
life, would probably go free, and boast of his successful crime. — p. 91.