Council
At the Court at Windsor
the 31st day of October 1848
Present
in Council.
Whereas there was this day read at the Board a Report of the
Right Honorable the Lords of the Committee of Council appointed for the
Consideration of all matters relating to Trade and Foreign Plantations
dated the 30th of this instant October in the words following, vizt;
"Your Majesty having been pleased by Your Order of Reference of the
4th September 1848 to refer unto this Committee a Draft of a Grant
of
the Island called
Vancouver's Island in North America to the Hudson's Bay Company, and copies of a correspondence relating
thereto,
to consider the same and
to report to Your Majesty whether in their
opinion any amendments should take place in the conditions contained in
the said Grant, or whether any further conditions should be inserted
therein, for the purpose of binding the Hudson's Bay Company to use
their best to effect the Colonization of the
said Island;
"We the Lords of this Committee have taken the same into
Consideration, and having fully enquired into the whole matter, do this
day agree humbly to report to Your Majesty that in our opinion it is
essential in order to secure the more effectual Colonization of
Vancouver's Island, that certain amendments should be made to some of
the Conditions inserted in the said Draft Grant, and that certain
further conditions should be inserted therein and we therefore humbly
recommend
recommend that Your Majesty should cause amendments and further
conditions to be inserted in the said Grant to the following effect,
viz
t;
"That the Grant of the Fishery of all Sorts of Fish in the Seas
Bays Inlets and Rivers within or surrounding the said Island be omitted
from the said Draft Grant.
"That in that part of the said Draft Grant which sets forth the
intent of the Crown that the Company shall establish Settlements of
Emigrants from the United Kingdom, further conditions should be
inserted binding the said Company to dispose of all Lands thereby
granted to them at a reasonable price, except so much as may be
required for public purposes, and that all monies which shall be
received by the said Company for the
purchasepurchase of such land, and also
from all payments which may be made to them for, or in respect of, the
Coal or other Minerals to be obtained in the
said Island, or the right
of searching for and getting
the same shall (after deduction of such
Sums by way of profit as shall not exceed a deduction of 10 per cent
from the gross amount received by the said Company from the sale of
such Land, and in respect of such Coal and other Minerals as aforesaid)
be applied towards the Colonization and improvement of the
said Island;
"And that the Company shall reserve for the use of Her Majesty Her
Heirs and Successors all such land as may be required for the formation
of Naval Establishments, Her Majesty Her Heirs and Successors paying a
reasonable price for the same;
"That
"That the neglect on the part of the Hudson's Bay Company to
observe the hereinbefore mentioned conditions respecting the Sale of
Land and Coal shall be included among the conditions upon which it
shall be lawful for Her Majesty Her Heirs and Successors to revoke the
said Grant after the expiration of five years from the date thereof.
"And We accordingly submit an amended Draft of a Grant embodying
the foregoing stipulations.
"The Lords of this Committee further humbly report to Your Majesty
that in their opinion the existing provisions for the tryal of Criminal
Offences and also of Civil Causes in
Vancouver's Island, under 1 & 2
Geo: 4. c. 66, are inadequate for the due Administration of Justice,
inasmuch as under the 12
th Section of that Act it is provided that
the Courts shall not try any offender for any felony made the subject
of Capital Punishment or transportation, or any Civil Action or Suit
in
in
which the cause of such Action or Suit shall exceed in value £200, and
that in every case of any offence subjecting the person committing the
same to Capital punishment or transportation, the Offender must be sent
for tryal to the Court of the Province of Upper Canada;
"The Lords of this Committee therefore humbly submit to Your
Majesty the expediency of making further and more satisfactory
provision for the tryal of Offences and Civil Causes in
Vancouver's Island, which in their opinion can only be effected by an amendment by the Legislature of
the provisions contained in the 1
st & 2
d
George IV. c. 66."
Her Majesty having taken the said Report into Consideration was
pleased by and with the advice of Her Privy Council to approve thereof.
_____
Royal Grant.
___
VICTORIA, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland Queen, Defender of the Faith, to all to whom these
Presents shall come, greeting:
Whereas by the Royal Charter or letters patent of his late
Majesty King Charles the Second, bearing date the second day of May, in
the twenty-second year of his reign, His said late Majesty did (amongst other things) ordain and declare that the Governor and Company of
Adventurers of England trading into Hudson's Bay, thereby incorporated
and their successors by that name, should at all times thereafter be
personable and capable in law to have, purchase, receive, possess, and
enjoy and retain alnds, rents, privileges, liberties, jurisdictions,
franchises, and hereditaments, of what nature or kind soever they were,
to them or their successors: And also to give, grant, demise, alien,
assign and dispose lands, tenements, and hereditaments, and to do and
execute all and singular other things by the same name that to them
should or might appertain to do:
And His said late Majesty did thereby for himself, his heirs and
successors, give, grant and confirm unto the said Governor and Company
and their successors, the sole trade and commerce of all those seas,
straits, bays, rivers, lakes, creeks and sounds, in whatsoever latitude
they should be, that lay within the entrance of the straits commonly
called Hudson's Straits, together with all the lands and
[237]
B
2
territories upon the countries, coasts and confines of the seas, bays, lakes,
rivers, creeks, and sounds aforesaid, that were not already actually
possessed by or granted to any of His said late Majesty's subjects, or
possessed by the subjects of any other Christian Prince or State, with
the fishing of all sorts of fish, whales, sturgeons and all other royal
fishes in the seas, bays, inlets and rivers within the premises, and
the fish therein taken ; together with the royalty of the seas upon the
coasts within the limits aforesaid, and all mines royal, as well then
discovered as not then discovered, of gold, silver, gems and precious
stones to be found or discovered within the territories, limits, and
places aforesaid, and that the said land should be from thenceforth
reckoned and reputed as one of His said late Majesty's plantations or
colonies in America:
And further, His said late Majesty did thereby for himself, his
heirs, and successors, make, create and constitute the said Governor
and Company for the time being and their successors the true and
absolute lords and proprietors of the same territory, limits and places
aforesaid, and of all other the premises (saving always the faith,
allegiance, and sovereign dominion due to His said late Majesty, his
heirs and successors for the same); to hold, possess and enjoy the said
territory, limits, and places, and all and singular other the premises thereby granted as aforesaid,
with their and every of their rights,
members, jurisdictions, prerogatives, royalties, and appurtenances whatsoever to them the said Governor
and Company and their successors
for ever; to be holden of His said late Majesty, his heirs and
successors, as of his manor of East Greenwich, in the county of Kent, in free and common soccage,
and not in capite or by knight's service ; yielding and paying yearly to His said late Majesty, his
heirs and successors, for the same, two elks
and two black beavers whensoever and as often as His said late Majesty,
his heirs and successors, should happen to enter into the said
countries, territories, and regions thereby granted:
And whereas by an Act passed in the session of
3
Parliament held in the forty-third year of the reign of His late Majesty King George
the
Third, intituled, "An Act for extending the Jurisdiction
of the Courts
of Justice in the Provinces of
Lower and Upper Canada, to the trial and
punishment of persons guilty of crimes and offences
within certain
parts of North America adjoining
to the said Provinces," it was enacted that from and after the passing of that Act
all offences
committed
within any of the Indian territoriesor parts of America not within the
limits of either of the said provinces of Lower or Upper Canada, or of
any Civil Government of the United States of America, should be and be
deemed to be offences of the same nature, and should be tried in the
same manner and subject to the same punishment as if the same had been
committed within the provinces of Upper or Lower Canada, and provisions
were contained in the said Act regulating the committal and trial of
the offenders:
And whereas by an Act passed in the session of
Parliament holden in the first and second years of the reign of His late Majesty King
George the Fourth,
intituled "An Act for regulating the
Fur Trade, and
establishing a Criminal and
Civil Jurisdiction within certain Parts of
North
America," after reciting, among other things, that doubts had
been entertained whether the provisions of said Act of the forth-third
George the Third, extended to the territories granted by charter to the
said Governor and Company, and that it was expedient that such doubts
should be removed, and that the said Act should be further extended; it
was enacted (amongst other things), that from and after the passing of
said last-mentioned Act, it should be lawful for His then Majesty, his
heirs and successors, to make grants, or give his Royal licence under
the hand and seal of one of His Majesty's Principal
Secretaries of
State to any body corporate or company, or person or persons of or for
the exclusive privilege of trading with the Indians in all such parts
of North America as should be specified in any of such grants or
licences respectively, not being part of the lands or territories
theretofore
4
granted to the said Governor and Company of Adventurers of
England trading into Hudson's Bay, and not being part of any of His
Majesty's provinces in North America, or of any lands or territories
belonging to the United States of America, subject to the provisions
and
restrictions in the said Act mentioned:
And it was thereby further enacted, that the said Act of the
forty-third of George the Third, and all the clauses and provisoes
therein
contained, should be deemed and construed, and was and were
thereby respectively declared to extend to and over, and to be in full
force in and through all the territories theretofore granted to the
said Company of Adventurers trading to
Hudson's Bay:
And whereas by Our grant or Royal licence bearing date the
thirteenth day of May, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight,
under the hand and seal of one of our then Principal Secretaries of
State, we granted and gave Our licence to the said Governor and Company
and their successors, for the exclusive privilege of trading with the
Indians in all such parts of North America to the northward and
westward of the lands and territories belonging to the United States of
America as should not form part of any of our provinces in North
America, or of any lands or territories belonging to the United States
of America, or to any European Government, State, or Power; subject
nevertheless as therein mentioned:
And we did thereby give and grant and secure to the said Governor
and Company and their successors, the sole and exclusive privilege for
the full period of twenty-one years from the date thereof, of trading
with the Indians in all such parts of North America as aforesaid,
except as therein mentioned, at the rent therein reserved, and upon the
terms and subject to the qualification and power of revocation therein
contained:
And whereas by a Treaty between Ourselves and the United States of
America, for the
settlement of the
Oregon Boundary, signed at
5
Washington on the
fifteenth day of June, One thousand eight hundred and
forty-six, it was agreed upon and concluded (amongst other things) as
follows: That from the point of the forty-ninth parallel of north
latitude, where the boundary laid down in existing treaties and
conventions between Great Britain and the said United States,
terminated the line of boundary between our territories and those of
the United States, should be continued westward along the said parallel
of north latitude to the middle of the channel which separates the
continent from
Vancouver's Island, and thence southerly through the
middle of the said channel and of
De Fuca's Straits to the Pacific
Ocean: Provided, however, that the navigation of the whole of the said
channel and straits south of the forty-ninth parallel of south latitude
should remain free and open to both parties:
And whereas certain of Our lands, and
territories in North America
lie to the westward and also to the northward of the territory granted
to the said Governor and Company by the
hereinbefore recited grant or
letters patent of His said late Majesty King Charles the Second, and
which is, pursuant to the direction in that behalf
contained in such
grant or letters patent, called or known as
Rupert's Land, and to the
eastward of the territories the boundary line of which is defined by
the hereinbefore recited Treaty with the United States of North America:
And whereas under the said last-mentioned grant or letters patent
and also under our
hereinbefore recited grant or licence of the
thirteenth day of May, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight, the
said Governor and Company have traded as well within as beyond the
limits of the lands and territories granted to them by the said grant or
letters patent of His said late Majesty King Charles the Second, and
have, in connection with and for the protection of their trade
beyd
the said limits, been in the habit or erecting forts and other isolated
establishments without the said limits, and some of such forts and
establishments of the said Governor and Company are now ex-
C
6
isting in that part of Our said territories in North America, including
Vancouver's Island, the
boundary line between which and the territories
of the said United States is determined by the
hereinbefore recited
Treaty between Ourselves and the said Unites States:
And whereas it would conduce greatly to the maintenance of peace,
justice, and good order, and the advancement of colonization and the
promotion and encouragement of trade and commerce in, and also to the
protection and welfare of the native Indians residing within that
portion of Our territories in North America called
Vancouver's Island,
if such island were colonized by settlers from the British dominions,
and if the property in the land of such island were vested for the
purpose of such colonization in the said Governor and Company of
Adventurers of England trading into Hudson's Bay; but nevertheless,
upon
condition that the said Governor and Company should form on the
said island a settlement or
settlements, as hereinafter mentioned, for
the purpose of colonizing the said island, and also should defray the
entire expense of any civil and military establishments which may be
required for the protection and government of such settlement or
settlements (except, nevertheless, during the time of hostilities
between Great Britain and any foreign European or American power):
Now know ye, that We, being moved by the reasons before mentioned,
do by these 'Presents, for Us, Our heirs and successors, give, grant,
and confirm unto the said Governor and Company of Adventurers of
England trading into Hudson's Bay, and their successors, all that the
said island called
Vancouver's Island,
with the fishing of all sorts of fish in the seas, bays, inlets, and
rivers within or surrounding the same, together with all royalties of
the seas upon the coasts within the limits aforesaid, and all mines
royal thereto belonging:
And further We do, by these Presents, for Us, Our Heirs and
successors, make, create and
constitute the said Governor and Company
for the time being, and their successors, the true and
7
absolute lords and proprietors of the same
territories, limits, and places, and of all
other the
(saving always the faith, allegiance, and sovereign
dominion due to Us, Our heirs, and successors for the same), to have,
hold, possess, and enjoy the said territory, limits and places, and all
and singular other the premises hereby granted as aforesaid, with their
and every of their rights, members, royalties, and appurtenances
whatsoever to them, the said Governor and Company, and their successors
for ever, to be holden of Us, Our heirs and successors, in free and
common soccage, at the yearly rent of seven shillings, payable to Us
and Our successors for ever, on the first day of January in every year:
Provided always, and We declare, That this present Grant is made
to the intent that the said Governor and Company shall establish upon
the said island a settlement or settlements of resident colonists,
emigrants from Our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or from
other Our dominions, and shall dispose of the land there as may be
necessary for the purposes of colonization: And to the intent that the
said Company shall, with a view to the aforesaid purposes, dispose of
all lands hereby granted to them at a reasonable price, except so much
thereof as may be required for public purposes ; and that all monies
which shall be received by the said Company for the purchase of such
land, and also from all payments which may be made to them for or in
respect of the coal or other minerals to be obtained in the said
island, or the right of searching for and getting the same, shall
(after deduction of such sums by way of profit as shall not exceed a
deduction of ten per cent. from the gross amount received by the said
Company, from the sale of such land, and in respect of such coal or
other minerals as aforesaid) be applied towards the colonization and
improvement of
the island: And that the Company shall reserve for the
use of Her Majesty, her heirs and successors, all such land as may be
required for the formation of naval establishments, Her Majesty, her
heirs and successors, paying a reasonable price for the same:
8
And that the said Company shall, once in every two years at the least, certify
under the seal of the said Governor and Company, to one of Our
Principal Secretaries of State, what colonists shall have been from
time to time settled in the
said island, and what land shall have been
disposed of as aforesaid.
And We further declare, That this present Grant is made upon this
condition, that if the said Governor and Company shall not, within the
term of five years from the date of these Presents, have established
upon the
said island a settlement of resident colonists, emigrants from
the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or from other Our
dominions, and it shall at any time, after the expiration of such term
of five years, be certified to Us, Our heirs or successors, by any
person who shall be appointed by Us, Our heirs or successors, to
inquire into the condition of
such island, that such settlement has not
been established according to the intent of this Our Grant, or that the
provisions hereinbefore
mentioned respecting the disposal of land, and
the price of lands and minerals, have not been
respectively fulfilled,
it shall be lawful for Us, Our heirs and successors, to revoke this
present Grant, and to enter upon and resume the
said island and
premises hereby granted, without prejudice,
nevertheless, to such
dispositions as may have been made in the meantime by the said Governor
and Company of any land in the said island for the actual purpose of
colonization and settlement, and as shall have been certified as
aforesaid to one of Our Principal Secretaries of State.
And We hereby declare, That this present Grant is and shall be
deemed and taken to be made upon this further condition, that We, Our
heirs and successors, shall have, and We accordingly reserve unto Us
and them, full power, at the expiration of the said Governor and
Company's grant or licence of or for the exclusive privilege of trading
with the Indians, to repurchase and take of and from the said Governor
and Company the said
Vancouver's Island and premises hereby granted, in
consideration of payment being made
9
by Us, Our heirs and successors, to
the said Governor and Company of the sum or sums of money theretofore
laid out and expended by them in and upon the said island and premises,
and of the value of their establishments, property and effects then
being thereon.
In witness whereof, We have caused these Our letters to be made
patent. Witness Ourselves, at Westminster, the day of
in the year of our reign.
________
Royal Grant.
____