Separate
               
            
            
               16 July 1861
               
            
            
               When addressing Your Grace from 
Lytton in my Separate Despatch 
               
                  
                     Just going to the printer.
                     
                 of the 
4th of June last, I communicated the
               information and impressions of the state
of
 of the Country which
               I had received on my previous journey. I will now in this Despatch
               continue the subject subsequently to my departure from 
Lytton.
               
               2.  Leaving that place, I travelled for 35 miles along
               the banks of 
Thompson's River, by a good horse-road lately made at a trifling cost, and successively visited the
               
Buonaparte
               and 
Hat Rivers, and the 
Pavillion,
where
 where we fell upon 
the Fraser,
               and followed it downwards to 
Cayoosh. The District comprehended within those limits is exceedingly beautiful and picturesque,
               being composed of a succession of hills and valleys, exhibiting
               to the traveller accustomed to the endless forests of the Coast
               Districts, the unusual and grateful spectacle of miles of green
               hills, curving slopes, and level meadows,
almost
 almost without a bush
               or tree to obstruct the view, and even to the very hill-tops
               producing an abundant growth of grass.  It is of great value as
               a grazing district, a circumstance which appears to be thoroughly
               understood and appreciated by the country Packers, who are in
               the habit of leaving their mules and Horses here when the regular
               work of packing goods to the Mines is suspended for the winter.
The
               The animals even at that season, are said to improve in condition,
               though left to seek their own food, and to roam at large over the
               country, a fact which speaks volumes in favour of the climate and
               of the natural pastures. It has certainly never been my good
               fortune to visit a country more pleasing to the eye, or possessing
               a more healthy and agreeable climate, or a greater extent of fine
pasture
 pasture land, and there is no doubt that with a smaller amount of labour and outlay
               than in almost any other Colony, the energetic
               settler may soon surround himself with all the elements of
               affluence and comfort.
               
               3.  Notwithstanding these advantages, such have hitherto been
               the difficulties of access, that the course of regular settlement
               has hardly yet commenced.
               
            A. 4 
            
            
               4.  A good deal of running stock has been brought in for sale
               but with the exception of eight or ten persons, there are no
               farmers in the District. One of those, 
Mr McLean, a native of
               Scotland, and lately of the Hudson's Bay Company's Service, has
               recently settled on a beautiful spot, near the debouch of 
Hat River, and is rapidly bringing his land into cultivation.  He has a great number of horses
               and
cattle
 cattle of the finest American breeds, and from the appearance of the crops, there
               is every
               prospect that his labour and outlay will be well rewarded. He
               is full of courage, and as confident, as deserving of success.
               He entertains no doubt whatever of the capabilities of the soil,
               which he thinks will, under proper management, produce any kind
               of grain or root crops. The only evil he seriously apprehends
is
 is
               the want of rain and the consequent droughts of summer, which has
               induced him to bring a supply of water from a neighbouring stream,
               by which he can at pleasure irrigate the whole of his fields.
               
               5. I received an equally favourable report from 
Mr Reynolds, who commenced a farm at the 
Pavillion in the year 
1859, and he has consequently had the advantage of two years experience.
               
 
            
            
               His last crop, besides a profusion of garden vegetables,
               consisted of Oats, Barley, Turnips, and Potatoes, and the produce
               was most abundant. The land under potatoes yielded 375 bushels
               to the acre. The turnip crop was no less prolific, one of the
               roots weighed 26 lbs;  and Swedes of 15 lbs and 16 lbs were
               commonly met with.  He could not give the yield of Oats and
               Barley, the greater part having been sold in the
sheaf
 sheaf for the use of the Mule Trains passing to and from the Mines;  but the
               crop, as was manifest from the weight and length of the straw,
               which attained a height of fully four feet, was remarkably good.
               He generally allows his cattle to run at large, and they seldom
               require to be housed or fed in winter.
               
               6. The cold is never severe, the greatest depth of snow in
               
1859 was 12 inches;
and
 and the following winter it did not exceed 6 inches.  Ploughing commences about the
               middle of March.  The summers are generally dry, and 
Mr Reynolds is of opinion that irrigation will be found an indispensable application in the process
               of
               husbandry in this District. In the dry summer of 
1859 he kept water almost constantly running through his fields, but applied
               it only twice during the summer of 
1860, when the moisture of the
atmosphere
 atmosphere proved otherwise sufficient for the crops.
               
               7.  The numerous streams which permeate the valleys of this
               District afford admirable facilities for inexpensive irrigation, so
               bountiful indeed has Nature been in this respect, that it is hardly
               an exaggeration to say that there is a water-course or rivulet for
               every moderate sized farm that will be opened in the District.
               
            
            
               8.  A few successful
experiments
 experiments in husbandry will give confidence and add to the number of the farming
               class, which continues to be in a lamentable minority in every part of the Colony,
               even in Districts where one would suppose Mining to be a less profitable pursuit than
               the cultivation of the soil.
               
               9.  The Mining Districts of 
Thompson's River, and of 
the Fraser
               below the 
Pavillion, have been almost abandoned by the white Miners of the
Colony
 Colony, who have been generally carried away by the prevailing excitement to the
               
Cariboo and 
Antler Creek Mines, and their claims
               are now occupied by Chinamen and Native Indians, the latter
               especially exhibiting an unwonted degree of activity in Mining—their
               daily earnings sometimes reach the large sum of Two pounds
               Sterling, and never, as they assured me, fall short of Eight Shillings,
               so that they are becoming exceedingly valuable to the
Colony
 Colony, both
               as producers, and as a tax-paying population. 
I, in fact, ascertained
                  from the official Returns of Yale, that 30 per cent of the amount of Roads Tolls was levied directly on the goods of
                  Indians leaving that place; and from their numbers and habits it may be fairly
                  assumed that 40 per cent of the whole revenue collectively accruing
                  from Tolls and Customs falls on them.
               
               10. The Mines on 
TranquilleRiver River
 River have lately attracted much attention, in consequence of quantities of coarse gold
               having been
               found in pieces weighing as much as three quarters of an ounce, and
               the discovery of a Stratum of auriferous earth—in Mining phrase,
               "pay dirt"—from three to four feet in thickness, at a much higher
               level than the present bed of the river, which until then was
               supposed to be the exclusive depository of Gold. This circumstance
               has given
a
 a new direction to the industry of the place, the Miners having less faith in surface
               diggings, and being generally impressed
               with the advantage of deeper sinkings, which may probably reveal, as
               was the case in the Gold Fields of 
Victoria, greater wealth than has
               yet been found, and this in my opinion is simply a question of time.
               
               11. There are extensive flats or Holmes in the Valley of 
the Thompson that give a
large
 large return of Gold, but being above the river, they cannot be worked to much advantage
               until water from a higher level that can be applied to sluicing is brought into play.
               Several smooth water-worn nuggets, weighing as much as two ounces, have
               been found on the 
Thompson below 
Lake Kamloops, and diggings have
               been lately discovered on three of the affluents of 
North River
               (North Branch of 
the Thompson). The Streams flowing
from
 from the
               Eastward into 
Okanagan Lake are also reported to be highly productive
               of Gold—facts, which all tend to support the theory alluded to in
               my Despatch of the 
4th of June last regarding the existence of
               a vast auriferous Ridge or Water-shed, extending from 
Rock Creek to 
Fort George, and dividing 
the Columbia from the waters of 
Fraser River.
               
               12.  I feel a deep
interest
 interest in the exploration and development
               of that valuable and important division of the Colony, which is now
               so difficult of access as to be practically closed to the ordinary
               settler;  and there is moreover, no convenient place where the
               Miner can replenish his exhausted stores.  With the view of
               removing these drawbacks, I propose to lay out a Town Site, as
               a Mining Depôt, and centre
of
 of trade on 
Thompsons River about ten
               miles below 
Lake Kamloops, from whence the navigation is said to
               be practicable for Stern-Wheel Boats, through 
Lake Kamloops to the
               distance of 100 Miles up 
North River, and also by the South Branch
               of 
the Thompson to the further extremity of 
Shouswap Lake.  As
               another part of the plan, I propose that Steam Boats of the same
               class should be employed in 
OkanaganLake Lake
 Lake, connecting with the
               Caravans arriving by the way of 
Hope and 
Shimilkameen from 
Frasers River, and finally, a good road between the two Lakes 
Shouswap and
               
Okanagan, and from the latter Lake continued in a Southerly
               direction to the 
Columbia River, will complete a line of communication
               connecting the Eastern Districts with 
Frasers River, and affording facilities for transport that will render 
Hope the channel of trade,
               and
prevent
 prevent it from seeking an outlet by the 
Columbia River, and which in other respects will be of inestimable advantage to the Colony.
               
               13.  The latest accounts from 
Cariboo confirm the former reports
               of its vast auriferous wealth.  About 1500 men are supposed to be
               congregated in those Mines, and the number is continually augmented
               by the arrival of fresh bodies of Miners.  It will be a work of
difficulty
               difficulty to keep them supplied with food, a service which now
               gives employment to about 1200 transport horses and mules, and I
               am in hopes that the large profits made in that business will lead
               to its extension.
               
               14.  To facilitate the transport to those Mines, I authorised
               a grant of Four Hundred Pounds to improve the River Trail from
               
Cayoosh to 
Williams Lake;
and
 and Four Hundred Pounds to open a Trail from 
Quesnelle to 
Cariboo Lake, the charge, in both cases, to be defrayed out of the District Revenues.
               
               15.  The remoteness of the 
Cariboo Mines, and the large
               assemblage of people there, have rendered it necessary to establish
               a Gold Escort for the conveyance of treasure from 
Quesnelle to 
New
                  Westminster, and more especially with the view
of
 of strengthening the hands of the Magistrates in those distant localities by the
               periodical exhibition of a small Military Force.  This will put
               the Colony to much expense, but I conceive it is an indispensable
               precaution that may prevent much future evil.
               
               16. There is nothing of much importance to communicate
               respecting the Towns of 
Cayoosh and 
Douglas, except that they are
               both progressively improving.
I
 I authorised the grant of allotments of land to the 
Bishop of British Columbia, at those places, as sites for Churches, and Two Hundred Pounds at each, in aid of
               private contributions for the erection thereof. The latter measure was adopted at
               the instance of the inhabitants generally, who represented that they had no building
               where Divine Service
               could be properly held, that they had contributed liberally towards
               the fund, and that their
own
 own means alone were not adequate to the
               erection of Churches. In those circumstances, and as no other
               denomination of Christians were in the field in that part of the
               Colony, I most cordially responded to the wishes of the public.
               
               17.  I returned to 
New Westminster on the 
20th of June, and in conclusion it only remains for me to add the gratifying intelligence
that
 that peace and good order prevail throughout the Colony.
               
               I have the honor to be
               My Lord Duke,
               Your Grace's most obedient
               and humble Servant
               
James Douglas
               
               P.S. An Explanatory Map is transmitted with this Despatch. 
James Douglas
               
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Sir F. Rogers
                     I think that if this despatch is soon given to the Parl
y Clerk it may be included in the collection of 
B. Columbia
                     correspondence now in the hands of the printer.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     To the Printer if in time.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     I will reduce the map & lithograph it within the space of
                     a fortnight from this date.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                   
                
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Map not in file.  Published in
                     
Further Papers Relative to the Affairs of British Columbia,
                     Part IV, ff p. 54.