Separate
               
            
            
               9 July 1862
               
            
            
               I have much satisfaction in communicating for your Grace's
               information that intelligence was this morning received, by the
               arrival of the Sloop "
North Star," from 
Stickeen of the continued
               welfare of Her
Majesty's
 Majesty's Subjects in that quarter.
               
               2. In addition to the statements of the Master of that vessel,
               a number of private communications have been received from the miners by
               their friends at this place, which furnish much valuable and apparently
               reliable information respecting 
Stickeen and its resources.
               
               3. It appears by these reports that the mines are not yet
               fairly started, for no sooner had the ice disappeared, and the
               mining claims been selected and opened, than the freshets
swollen
 swollen
               by the mountain snow, set in with violence, flooding all the River
               Bars, and compelling the reluctant miners to suspend for a time
               their productive labours.  The yield of gold is said to have,
               therefore, not been large, yet the miners do not complain, but are,
               on the contrary, full of hope, being now convinced from the
               researches made, and from their own experience, that the country
               does actually possess large auriferous resources, a few, moreover,
               are said to have realized handsome sums, especially one party of
               two men, who,
in
 in the interval between the departure of the ice and
               the rising of the river, a period of about seven days, succeeded
               in taking out of their claim six hundred and seventy-five dollars
               worth of gold.
               
               4. The miners who have visited 
Stickeen appear to have formed
               a very favorable opinion of the Country, believing that it contains
               rich and extensive deposits of gold, no less so, indeed than those
               existing in the valleys watered by 
the Fraser and its tributaries, an opinion which derives
force
 force and corroboration from the number of places, both River Bars and Bank Claims,
               which have been successfully tested.
               
               5. Several small bodies of miners are engaged in constructing
               flumes and making other preparations for the steady and vigorous
               prosecution of their arduous labours.
               
            
            
               6. 
The Stickeen trade already gives employment to a number
               of small sail vessels which are continually plying to and from
               this place. The Stern wheel
Steamer
 Steamer "
Flying Dutchman," lately
               employed in 
Fraser River, is now plying on 
the Stickeen, and has
               successfully accomplished its ascent to the distance of 140 miles
               from the sea.  The great ambition of her enterprising owner being
               now to reach the 
"Upper Narrows" (Big Canon) about 160 miles from
               the sea, which is considered as the head of Steam Boat navigation,
               the river beyond that point being inaccessible to craft larger than
               boats and Canoes.
               
               7. I enclose cuttings from the British Colonist of the 
9th
                  instant, conveying
further
 further information relative to the new gold
               field which may be interesting to your Grace.
               
               8. No communication whatever relative to 
the Stickeen, has
               hitherto passed between my Government and the Governor of the
               Russian American Company's Possessions on this Coast.  I have not
               considered it expedient to enter into any explanations, nor has
               that officer demanded information on the subject, nor made any
               attempt to interfere with British Subjects proceeding to 
the Stickeen River. I have
now
 now however made arrangements with 
Admiral
                  Sir Thomas Maitland to despatch one of Her Majesty's Ships on a
               complimentary visit to the Governor of the Russian Settlement of
               
Sitka, to assure him of the friendly sentiments of Her Majesty's Government, and of our
               earnest wish to avoid every cause of
               difference, and to co-operate cordially with him in maintaining
               peace and order.
               
               9. Before closing this Despatch I have further to remark,
               that, slender as is our knowledge of the general
features
 features and
               resources of 
Stickeen, and imperfectly as it has hitherto been
               explored, there is in my opinion a sufficient attraction in the
               simple fact, now so clearly established, of the existence of gold
               in remunerative quantities to draw a mining population to the
               Country; and the experienced miner has something stronger even
               than that fact to build his hopes upon; he sees in it an earnest
               of further and more valuable discoveries probably of rich deposits
               of
heavy
 heavy gold at remoter points, from whence the smaller particles
               descending through the force of floods, and torrents, have
               gradually settled in the sands and flats of rivers.  The drift
               gold is thus prized not only for its intrinsic worth, but as being
               also an evidence of the existence of richer deposits; and I have
               long entertained the opinion that were the researches of science
               practically directed to the advancement of this branch of knowledge
               data might be found in the character and indications
of
 of the soil,
               that would conduct, by inerring process, from the outpouring as it
               were, of the lead, to the parent mines.
               
               10. Under these circumstances 
the Stickeen can hardly fail to
               become the resort of a mining population, and Her Majesty's
               Government will no doubt consider it necessary, ere disorders arise,
               to take measures for the government of the Country.
               
               11. All that perhaps is necessary for the present to secure
               tranquility until more formal action can
be
 be taken by Parliament, is
               to empower me to extend the Laws in force in 
British Columbia to
               all parts of Her Majesty's Dominions west of the 
Rocky Mountains,
               not included within the limits of any other Colony.
               
               I have the honor to be
               My Lord Duke
               Your Grace's most obedient
               humble Servant
               
James Douglas
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Approve Governor's proceedings and refer him to the 
Duke of
                        Newcastle's 
desph of the 
26 July N
o 134, which contained all the authority & information the Gov. will, for the present,
                     require.
                     
 
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
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