I have to communicate for the information of the Governor & Committee that the steam
vessel “
Commodore” arrived in this Port on the
25 of Instant, direct from
San Francisco with 450 passengers chiefly gold miners who have come here with the intention of
working the gold mines of the Interior.
About 400 of those men were landed on the same day & with the exception of a few who
left yesterday for
Frasers River are now engaged in purchasing canoes and making arrangements for continuing their
journey by
Frasers River into the
Couteau Country.
They all appear to be well provided with mining tools and there seems to be no want
of Capital and intelligence among them. About 60 of the number are British subjects with about an equal number of Americans
and the rest are Germans, Frenchmen and Italians.
Though our little town was crowded to excess with this sudden influx of people and
there was a temporary scarcity of food and dearth of house accommodation
, the
policepolice force small and many temptations to excess, in the way of drink, yet they were
remarkably quiet and orderly
, and there has not been a single committal for rioting or drunkenness since their
arrival here.
The Merchants and general dealers of
Victoria are rejoicing in the increase of wealth and business produced by the arrival of so
large a body of people in the Colony, and are strongly in favour of making this place
a stopping point between
San Francisco and the Gold mines, which, so far as respects the prosperity of the Colony, is evidently
an object of the utmost importance, as both in going and returning, the Miners would
make purchases and spend a great deal of money; the value of property would be vastly
enhanced, while the sale of public land and the colonization of the Country would
be greatly promoted.
The interests of the Empire, if I may use the term, may not however be improved to
the same extent by the accession of a foreign population, whose sympathies are decidedly
anti British and strongly biased in favor of their own country and institutions.
From that point of view the question assumes an alarming aspect and leads us to doubt
the policy of permitting foreigners to enter the British Territory ad libitum, under
any circumstances
whatever,whatever, and especially without taking the oath of allegiance and otherwise giving
security to the government of the Country
.
It is in fact easy to
forsee the dangerous consequences of the free emigration of foreigners into the interior.
If the majority, as is almost inevitable, be Americans there will always be a hankering
in their minds after annexation to the United States, and with the aid of their Countrymen
in
Oregon and California so near at hand they will never cordially submit to British Rule nor
possess the loyal feelings of British subjects
.
I have no means at my disposal of stopping or restraining this influx of people, neither
do I feel at liberty to take any measures towards that end, until I hear from Her
Majesty’s Ministers and receive their directions on the subject.
In the meantime little harm can be done as the people, who have gone into the interior,
will meet with innumerable difficulties of route in their progress towards the mines,
both from the nature of the country and the dangerous state of the Rivers.
The principal diggings on
Frasers and
Thompsons Rivers are also at present, and will continue, flooded for many months to come
, there is moreover a great scarcity of food in the gold districts so that those united
causes will, in all probability, compel may of the ill
providedprovided adventurers to beat a retreat and for the time to relinquish the enterprise
.
The license system has not been yet carried into effect and it will be difficult to
bring it into a general operation. It has since occurred to me that by levying an
import duty on goods the gold districts might be taxed to any desirable extent, without
clamour or exciting discontent among the people an object which might be effected
at a moderate expense by means of a customs station on
Frasers River, and another at the point where the road from the
Columbia strikes the Ford of the
O’Kanagan River, those being the only two Commercial Avenues of the
Couteau Country.
I shall soon address her Majestys Government on the subjects referred to in this Communication, and it is also my intention
to represent how seriously the peace of the Country may be endangered by the presence
of so many people wandering over the interior in a vagrant state, especially in the
event of the diggings proving unremunerative and the miners being, as an inevitable
consequence, reduced to poverty, and destitute of the common necessaries of life.
It would perhaps be impossible, so great is the excitement, to arrest the torrent
of emigration at present, but by watching the course of events we may, I conceive,
manage to limit and control the tide and to introduce something like order and systematic
arrangement into the mining
operationsoperations of the Country.
The accompanying number of the
San Francisco news letter will give you an idea of the state of feeling among the inhabitants of
that City, in respect to
Vancouvers Island and the Couteau Gold Mines. That excitement has been got up through the efforts of
interested parties desirous of procuring freight and passengers for
Vancouvers Island.
The colored population of
San Francisco have been making enquiries about
Vancouvers Island and whether or not they would be allowed to settle and purchase land in this Colony,
as owing to some recent oppressive enactments of the legislature in California they
wish to transfer their allegiance to this Country; I gave them a favorable reply and
assured them of the protection of the laws if they settle in this Colony
.
I have the honor to be
Sir
Your obedient Servant
(Signed)
The tidings from the Gold district are of the most flattering description but are
not supported by a large return of gold dust.
M Simpson reports that gold is found in more or less abundance, on every part of
Fraser’s River from
Fort Yale to the Forks, but I presume those diggings cannot be very productive, or there would
have been a larger return of gold. Chief Trader
Yale reports that parties are proceeding up
Fraser’s River towards the gold diggings almost every day.
The arrival of so many
strangersstrangers is unpleasant, but until Her Majesty’s Government authorizes me to prevent
their Entrance into the Country, we are obliged to make a virtue of necessity and
to turn them to advantage
, especially as they do not interfere with the Fur Trade, and we wish to make
Fraser’s River the avenue to the gold districts, and to secure if possible the whole of their trade,
which will otherwise find an outlet by the
Columbia.”