Despatch to London.
Minutes (2), Enclosures (transcribed) (1), Other documents (1).
This document contains mentions of Indigenous Peoples. The authors of these documents
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.
Douglas defends his decision to send an armed expedition to the Cowichan district to arrest a man accused of attempted murder. He claims that the Cowichan tribe were
elated with the success of Oregon First Nations over United States Troops and had become
insolent and restive. His actions, therefore, were not influenced by the love of military display but by a profound sense of public duty.
The minutes acknowledge with satisfaction.
Enclosed is a draft reply from Labouchere thanking Douglas for explaining more fully the reasons for sending an armed force to the Cowichan district.
1. I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your Despatch
No 20, of the 13th of November last.
2. I trust I may be permitted to make a few explanatory
observations, in reference to the remarks inyour
your Despatch on the
subject of the expedition to Cowegin, with the view of more clearly
showing, than was done in my report of the expedition, that the measure
of sending an armed Force against the Cowegin Indians was only resorted
to, on the failure of all other means of bringing the criminal to
justice, and vindicating the authority of the Law.
3. I may add without fear of contradiction that never was a signal
example more urgently demanded for the maintenance of our prestige with
the Indian Tribes than on that occasion. Elated with the recent
successes of the Oregon Tribes over the UnitedStates
States Troops, the natives of this Colony were also becoming insolent and restive,
and
there exist the clearest proofs derived from the confession of his own
friends, to show that the Native who shot Williams, felt assured of
escaping with impunity. He, in fact told his friends that they had
nothing to fear from the enmity of the whites, as they would not venture
to attack a powerful tribe, occupying a country strong in its natural
defences, and so distant from the coast.
4. His friends were disposed to entertain the same opinion. Our
demands for the surrender of the criminal were answered by a rush to
arms, and a tumultuousassemblage assemblage of the Tribe in warlike array. From
thence arose the necessity of employing an armed force to support the
requisitions of the Law, and the danger to be guarded against, in our
efforts to apprehend the criminal, was a collision with the whole Tribe.
To avert that calamity, if possible, I had recourse, essentially, to the
same principles of action, as in the case of the successful expeditions
against the Cowegin and Nanaimo Tribes, reported in my Despatch of the
21st of January 1853, to Secretary Sir John S. Packington
[Pakington], that is, by striving to impress on the minds of the
Natives, that the terrors of the law would be let loose on the guilty
only, and noton
on the Tribe at large, provided they took no part in
resisting the Queens authority nor in protecting the criminal from
justice.
5. And further I took the field in person with the expeditionary
force, directed all their movements, and adopted every other precaution,
dictated by experience, to avert disaster and ensure success.
6. The disastrous warfare with the Natives of New Zealand, and
more recently in the British Settlements on the coast of Africa, where
the apprehension of a criminal led to much expense and the loss of many
valuable lives; and in our own neighbourhood the conflicts with the
Natives in American Oregon, and the fruitlessExpedition
expedition of Her
Majesty's Ships "Daedalus" and "Daphne" undertaken by my Predecessor
Governor Blanshard against the native Tribes of Vancouvers Island,
evince the difficulties and dangers of that service.
7. I may further assure Her Majestys Government that I was not
influenced by the love of military display in assuming the great
responsibility involved in directing the Cowegin Expedition; but solely
by a profound sense of public duty, and a conviction, founded on
experience, that it is only by resorting to prompt and decisive measures
of punishment, in all cases of aggression, that life and property can be
protected and the Native Tribes of this Colonykept
kept in a proper state of
subordination.
8. I have further much satisfaction in reporting that the result
of the expedition has produced a most salutary effect on the minds of
the Natives.
I have the honor to be Sir
Your most obedient humble Servant
James Douglas
Governor
The Right HonbleHenry Labouchere Esqre
Her Majesty's principal Secretary of State
For the Colonial Department.
I have received and perused with satisfaction your Despatch N 11 of the 24 of February
explaining herefully the proceeds on which you considered it necessary to lead an armed force against
the Cowegin Indians.