No. 114
               
            
            
               
               
                     New Westminster
                     
                  
               30th September 1868
               
               My Lord Duke,
                
            
            
            
            
               2.  The fire broke out in the Middle of the day so no lives were
               lost.  But property valued at from one to two hundred thousand
               pounds has been destroyed.  The Banks of 
British Columbia and
               North America have had everything burnt and the Hudson's Bay
               Company's Shop has gone.  These last were however prudent enough
               to
have
 have the greater part of their supply of goods kept in a
               cellar in the face of the hill behind the town and that has escaped.
               
               3.  
Barkerville had risen by degrees from a mere mining camp to
               a considerable town.  But the old plan had been adhered to and houses
               grew up on ground
               
               
               

                     
                     Qu (not more than)
                     
                  
               
               
               amply sufficient for tents.  Crowded
               together as they were in a narrow street it is not surprising
               that a few hours of conflagration
should
 should have destroyed the
               ambitious but frail wooden tenements.
               
               4.  I enclose the Magistrate's account of the fire and of the
               losses alleged to have been sustained.
               
            
            
               5.  The good conduct of the people of 
British Columbia, of which
               I have often boasted, failed them on this occasion and a large
               amount of property was stolen.  The Chinese were the principal
               offenders.  Miners proved not to be all
above
 above temptation, but I
               have the authority of 
Chief Justice Begbie for saying that there
               has not been a single charge brought against an Indian.  This
               seems strange and highly creditable to them.
               
               6.  The same energy which 
Cariboo has always shown has led to
               the beginning of the erection of a new 
Barkerville.  Before the
               cinders of the late houses were cold new buildings were rising on
               the former sites.  So totally however has the burnt portion been
               destroyed that the
greater
 greater part of the Magistrate's time is
               occupied in tracing with a Surveyor the space on which each
               building stood before the conflagration.  It is a matter of very
               great satisfaction to me the having 
Mr Brew in charge of the
               
Cariboo district at this time.
               
               7.  The frosts have already set in.  Prospecting is at an end
               for this season, as all hands will be engaged in rebuilding
               
Barkerville.  But in the midst of devastation, the Miners are
               cheerful and the scene
of
 of the evening's recreations has been for
               the present transferred to 
Richfield, a town about a mile off.
               
               8.  The Government Buildings are there, and in the destruction
               of 
Barkerville, I have only specifically to indicate my regret
               at the loss of the Public Library, the Miner's lounge and an
               object of my constant solicitude.
               
               I have the honor to be,
               My Lord Duke
               Your Grace's most obedient
               humble Servant.
               
Frederick Seymour
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     There is something really strange in the succession of Fevers,
                     Earthquakes, hurricanes & fires which have afflicted
                     the Colonies for the last two or three years.
                     
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     Express regret at this great and sudden calamity, join in the
                     hope that the arrival of goods and provisions will prevent
                     a dearth, and state satisfaction at the energy and public
                     spirit which has been

 displayed in repairing the injury caused
                     by the fire.
                     
 
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     C. Brew, Magistrate, to Colonial Secretary, 
15 September
                        1868 and 
22 September 1868, two reports giving details of the
                     destruction of 
Barkerville by fire and subsequent events,
                     including a list of property lost and stolen.
                     
                     
 
                   
            
            
               Other documents included in the file