No. 33
               
            
            
               19th February 1867
               
               My Lord,
                
            
            
               I beg leave to lay before you a paper which may not be
               without interest to Your Lordship.  It is a genuine Petition
               written by an Indian boy
and
 and signed by seventy Chiefs
               representing so many villages.  The Chinook is an exact
               translation of each English sentence which precedes it.  I
               think it a very satisfactory state of things when the
               Aborigines who so vastly outnumber us in this Colony where
               no troops are stationed, thus adopt the mode of petitioning
               instead of redressing their real of imaginary grievances by force.
               
 
            
            
               2.  The Indian Chiefs came down from 
Lytton on the North,
               
Douglas on the west, the whole of the Lower 
Fraser in our
               proximity, and even from the Land of the Euclatows on the
               Coast, to see me and protest against certain action proposed
               to be taken by some Members of the Legislative Council.  The
               Natives petition, first,
               
               That the Law which prohibits the
               sale of spirituous
liquors
 liquors in their villages be not repealed.
               I replied that the Liquor Law of the Mainland should not only
               be maintained here but extended over 
Vancouver Island.
               
               Secondly, the Indians pray that their Reserves be not
               interfered with.  A Resolution requesting me to curtail such
               Reserves having passed the Council.  A few of these Reserves
               are doubtless too large, but they shall not
be
 be reduced without
               my personal inspection.  I replied merely, according to their
               own mode of expression, that "My heart was as good to the
               Indian as to the white man."
               
               Thirdly, they beg that the heavy duty on their canoes
               navigating the 
Fraser be abolished.  I told them I had already
               proposed to the Gentlemen there (pointing to the Council Room)
               to relieve them from this payment
great
 great as is our financial
               embarrassment the charging the Natives for the navigation
               of our great river struck me as manifestly unjust.
               
               3.  All the Chiefs who set their Mark to the Petition and
               many others assembled on the lawn of Government House.  I was
               received with loud cheers which were repeated at the end of my
               statement.
               
            
            
               4.  I wish I could report
matters
 matters, as regards the Indian
               Population to be as satisfactory on 
Vancouver Island as on the
               Mainland.  The Council is at present, however, engaged in
               extending the Laws of 
British Columbia affecting the Natives over
               the whole Colony.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  Mr Elliot
                     Acke—with satisfaction—the rec
t of this Petition
                     & of the ans
r returned to it by the Governor.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                   
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Petition regarding the issues as per despatch, written in both
                     English and Chinook, signed with the mark of seventy Indian chiefs.
                     
                     
                   
            
            
               Other documents included in the file