Esquimalt, near
Victoria, is part of the southern shores of
Vancouver Island. The Esquimalt First Nation had a longstanding village on the east side of this cove-notched
harbour, which
James Douglas declared as
one of the best harbours of the Coast
during his survey of the area for the HBC, though he referred to it “Is-whoy-malth”
at the time. Esquimalt is an anglicization of a Coast Salish term for
a place gradually shoaling.
Douglas would later negotiate treaties with several First Nation groups in the area, largely
for the development of HBC supply farms.
The British Royal Navy had military interests in Esquimalt as early as the 1840s,
but it was not until the 1860s that Esquimalt replaced
Valparaiso, Chile, as the headquaters for the Royal Navy's Pacific Station. Today, this area is home to Maritime Forces Pacific (MARPAC) and Canadian Forces
Base Esquimalt.