Separate
               
            
            
               16 September 1861
               
            
            
               I have much satisfaction in reporting to Your Grace that
               the Colony of 
British Columbia continues in a tranquil
and
 and
               progressive state.
               
               2.  The Gold Commissioners in their last monthly reports
               represent the continued exodus of the mining population from
               their respective Districts towards the "
Cariboo" country, in
               speaking of which I have adopted the popular and more convenient
               orthography of the word—though properly it should be written
               "Cariboeuf" or Rein Deer, the country having been so named from
its
               its being a favorite haunt of that species of the deer kind.
               
               3.  The most extraordinary accounts of the wealth of that
               Gold Field are received by every succeeding Steamer from 
British Columbia; and those accounts are confirmed by letters from the
               merchants and traders of the District, and by fortunate
               adventurers who have realized, by a few weeks labour, their
               thousands
of
 of dollars.  
It would in fact appear that Cariboo is
                  at least equal in point of auriferous wealth to the best parts
                  of California; and I believe the Gold deposits of 
British Columbia
               will be found to be distributed over a far more extensive space.
               
               4.  I am unable to arrive at any satisfactory conclusion as
               to the average daily earnings of Miners in the 
Cariboo country,
               but some
idea
 idea may be formed of the large sums realized, from the fact that 
195 ounces of Gold were taken in one day out of a single mining claim, while ordinary claims
               yield as much as forty and fifty dollars a day to the man:  but perhaps the most
               telling circumstance is the high price of labour, which has
               attained to the extraordinary sum of ten dollars a day, and
               any number of men
may
 may find employment at that rate of pay.
               
               5.  The 
Cariboo Gold District was discovered by a fine
               athletic young man by the name of 
McDonnell, a native of the island of Cape Breton, of mixed French and Scotch descent,
               combining in his personal appearance and character, the courage,
               activity and remarkable powers of endurance, of both races.  His
               health
has
 has suffered from three years constant exposure and
               privation, which induced him to repair with his well earned
               wealth to this Colony for medical assistance.
               
               6.  His verbal report to me is interesting, and conveys the
               idea of an almost exhaustless gold field, extending through the
               quartz and slate formations, in a northerly direction from 
Cariboo Lake.
               
 
            
            
               7.  The following well attested instances of successful mining
               at 
Cariboo may prove interesting, and will probably convey to Her
               Majesty's Government a more precise idea of the value and real
               character of this Gold-field than any mere generalizations, and
               with that object in view, I will lay the details, as received
               from the persons themselves, before Your Grace.
               
               8.  
John McArthurand
 and 
Thomas Phillips arrived here from 
Cariboo on the 
17th of August last with nine Thousand dollars worth of gold dust in their possession, being the
               fruits of three months
               residence at the mines. They arrived there on the 
1st day of
                  May, and left again on the 
1st day of August, having previously sold their mining claim at a high price to other persons.  Their
               largest earnings for one
day
 day amounted to five hundred and twenty
               five dollars, and no single days work yielded less than twenty
               five dollars.  Both those persons have been mining in California,
               and are acquainted with its resources, yet they give it as their
               opinion that 
Cariboo, as a "generally paying country, surpasses
               the best days of California".
               
               9.  
Mr Patterson and brother arrived at 
NewWestminster Westminster
 Westminster by
               the Steamer of the 
14th instant, with Ten Thousand dollars
               worth of gold dust, the produce of five weeks work at 
Cariboo.
               I personally inspected their treasury, of which they are justly
               proud, being the well earned reward of their skill and enterprise.
               
Mr Patterson's mining claim was on the 
Lowhee, a tributary of
               
Swift River, and about 16 Miles distant
from
 from 
Antler Creek.  The
               ground was composed of gravel and many quartz boulders, and the
               depth to the bed-rock was from 4 to 6 feet, beyond which he did
               not attempt to penetrate, though the richest deposit of gold was
               immediately over the bed-rock.  The largest days return from the
               claim was 73 ounces of gold, worth about Twelve Hundred dollars;
on
               on another occasion he received 70 ounces at the close of a days
               work.  The Gold is in rough jagged pieces, the largest found by
               
Mr Patterson was over six ounces; but on the next claim to his,
               a piece of ten ounces was picked up by the lucky proprietor. 
Mr
                  Patterson sold his mining claim before his departure from 
Cariboo,
               and is now returning to his native country, the
United
 United States,
               with the wealth he has so rapidly acquired in 
British Columbia,
               this being one of the evils to which the Colony is exposed through
               the want of a fixed population.
               
               10.  The firm of Mess
rs Levi and 
Boas of 
New Westminster have kindly permitted me to communicate the following extract from a letter dated
               
27th August 1861, which they very lately
received
 received from 
Mr Levi the managing partner of the firm at 
Cariboo:
               
               
               Hamburger went to 
Abbott who used to be at 
Langley, and
               borrowed $2000.  
I must let you know that Abbott and Jordon have one of the richest claims in the country.  The least they take out a day, three
                  of them, is 120 ounces.  They have a flour sack of Gold 14 inches high.They They will make till fall $100,000 a piece.
 They will make till fall $100,000 a piece. Out of one little crevice, while 
Hamburger was up there, he, 
Abbott, took 60 ounces out of it, and Gold makes your eyes water, and you will never see
               a greater excitement as there will be next season.
               
 
            
            
               If you can send up such goods as we want, do so, as I will
               explain to you it is only
5 or
 5 or 6 weeks more that pack trains can
               come in here, and then we can get any price for them, besides
               which, Spring, when there is a lot of people rushing in, and we
               the only ones which have goods.  You bet I would soak into them.
               The Country is alright, there is more gold in it as there was
               in California, dont say nothing to nobody.
               
               
               11.  I will not multiply
these
 these details, having said enough to show Your Grace the opinion entertained by the
               public of the newly
               discovered gold fields, and of the probable influx of population
               from California and other countries which may be attracted by those
               discoveries.  I need not assure Your Grace that every precaution
               will, in that event, be taken to maintain the peace, order, and
               good government
of
 of the country, and to increase its permanent
               population, but it is impossible to repress a feeling of profound
               regret that so few of Her Majesty's British subjects have yet
               participated in the rich harvests reaped in 
British Columbia,
               though there is certainly no country in the world that offers
               greater inducements to the labouring classes, or for the employment
               of capital.  The settler
enjoys
 enjoys the peculiar advantage in 
British Columbia of an unfettered choice of the public domain, and may
               without expense, or official delay, select any part of the Colony
               he pleases, as his future home; the ultimate price of country
               land being in no case over four shillings and two pence an acre,
               payable by instalments spread over several years.  In fact the
               system of no country can offer greater
inducements
 inducements to the settler and Miner than the land Regulations and Mining laws of
               
British Columbia.
               
               12.  The Miners at 
Cariboo have, I am glad to inform Your Grace, suffered no privation whatever from the want
               of food.  Besides the large importation of bread-stuffs and salt meat packed in from
               
Lillooet and 
Lytton, large droves of cattle have been sent to
               
Antler Creek, where the
native
 native grasses are nutritious and abundant, and fresh beef is now selling by retail
               at 1
s/8
d a pound. A Mining town of some note has sprung into existence at 
Antler Creek, and supplies of all kinds can be readily purchased.
               
               The traveller who is prepared to encounter famine in its
               gauntest forms on his arrival at 
Cariboo, is not a little astonished
               to find himself
in
 in the midst of luxury, sitting down every morning
               to fresh milk and eggs for breakfast, and to as good a dinner as
               can be seen in 
Victoria.
               
               13.  The great commercial thoroughfares leading into the
               interior of the country from 
Hope, 
Yale and 
Douglas, are in rapid
               progress, and now exercise a most beneficial effect on the internal
               commerce of the Colony.  I have many other productive public
works
 works
               indispensable for the development of the Colony in view, but I
               cannot undertake their execution until I am made acquainted with Your
               Grace's decision about the proposed loan of money for 
British Columbia.
               
               14.  There is nothing in the condition of the other Districts of
               the Colony with which I need trouble Your Grace at present, though
               it may be necessary soon to draw Your Grace's
attention
 attention to a reported
               discovery of Gold on 
Stickeen River—Latitude 57
o within Her Majesty's Territories north of 
British Columbia, to which some
               adventurers, trusting to the faith of the native Indians who brought
               the tidings, have inconsiderately repaired.
               
               15.  Should the report prove correct, it will be necessary to
               take steps for the government of the country,
and
 and to prevent the
               many disorders that will naturally arise from the absence of any
               duly constituted authority.
               
               16.  I will not fail to exercise that power, should circumstances
               require it, until Your Grace's instructions are received.
               
            
            
               I have the honor to be
               My Lord Duke,
               Your Graces most obedient
               and humble Servant
               
James Douglas
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Lay before Parlt.
                     
                  
                  
                     As this desp
t shows so forcibly the prosperity of 
B. Columbia I think it might be well to furnish the T-y with a copy
                     of it—that 
Dt having, at present, under its consideration, the question of a Loan of £50,000 to
                     the Colony.
                     
 
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft, 
Elliot to 
G.A. Hamilton, Treasury, 
12 November 1861,
                     forwarding copy of the despatch for information.
                     
 
            
            
               
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Abbott, Ivel
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Boas, Judah
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Elliot, Thomas Frederick
                  
                        Hamburger, D. J.
                  Hamilton, George Alexander
                  
                        Jourdan, William
                  
                        Levi, Solomon David
                  
                        McArthur, John
                  
                        McDonnell
                  
                        Patterson, Joseph
                  Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle Henry Pelham Fiennes
                  
                        Phillips, Thomas
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Antler Creek
                  British Columbia
                  Cariboo Lake
                  Cariboo Region
                  Fort Langley
                  Hope
                  Lillooet
                  Lowhee Creek
                  Lytton
                  New Westminster
                  Nova Scotia
                  Port Douglas
                  Quesnel River
                  Stikine River
                  Victoria
                  Yale