 
                  
                  
                      
                     Extract of a despatch from Con: Gen: 
MillerMarked no. 25 dated 
Woahoo Dec 9 1848 
                  
                  “I venture to observe that it might be of much alternate advantage to Great Britain
                     in a commercial point of view & in other respects, if public attention & adventure
                     could be directed not only to 
Vancouvers Island, but also to the perhaps no less important 
Queen Charlotte’s Island. Indeed the few hundred miles length of the North West Coast, with its extensive
                     straits, & numerous inlets still lying within our boundary, seen hitherto to have
                     
remained
remained too little known, & too seldom visited by British vessels, owning to the
                     want of free competition in traffick in those parts. 
Queen Charlotte’s Island upwards of 200 miles in length has several 
great good Harbours, one of which is scarcely inferior to that of 
Rio Janeiro, which it’s soil represented to be exceedingly rich, & its temperature milder than
                     that of the neighbouring continent, or that of England; still it contains no white
                     Inhabitants.”
  
               
               
               
               
                 
                  
                  
                      
                     Extract of a despatch from Con: Gen: 
Millerdated
Woahoo Dec 20 1848 
                  
                  
                  
                  From what I learn here it appears that 
Queen Charlotte’s Island is scarcely less important altho it is smaller than 
Vancouver’s Island. The first has the advantage of being the most distant of the two from the entering
                     Gold Region whilst it produces plentifully the best quality of Irish potatoes. Both
                     Islands contain abundance of good timber, the best adapted in the world it is said
                     for 
masts
masts and shars, for every description of ship, & which can be conveniently procured
                     at the distance of pistol shot from good anchorages: also inexhaustible coal mines,
                     as well it is supposed as copper, & probably other minerals.
Although mountainous, the Island are I am informed by Captains of the  Hudsons Bay
                     Company’s vessels, badly off far water, but of the interior of either little is known,
                     it never having been traversed by white men. The Indian population however is said
                     to be numerous & somewhat warlike. They furnish large quantities of fur to the 
company
company. They also easily catch all the year round, as much as they wish of 
Hallibut, an excellent Fish which abounds all along the N. W. Coast.
The numerous inlets and straits stretching along the coast of the Continent for some
                     degrees in that vicinity, are described to be admirable for steam navigation a route
                     but by no means a good one from the sea shore to the interior of the British North
                     American populations, has been discovered and travelled over, & search, I am told,
                     is now making for a better route.
                  
                  Mr Snow, an intelligent American, a partner in the firm of 
lowMessr Williams & co of 
this
this place, and who spent several years as chief officer, & subsequently as master
                     of a trading vessel on the N. W. Coast, assures me that be considers the country within
                     the British Boundary to the North of 49°, infinitely more valuable especially on account
                     of the timber & coals on the Islands before mentioned, than all 
Oregon including the 
Columbia River”
 
                     
               
               
               
               
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  “Fortunately every thing is going on quietly in this Country, since the Gold manaia
                     commenced it has relieved the settlement of many unquiet spirits who will not probably
                     return again to 
Oregon.
The harvest was abundant; I never indeed saw so much grain in the country before.
                     I fear it will be less so next year, as there is little doing in the farming way.
                     The general feeling among the people is in favor of a move towards 
California as soon as spring comes in hopes 
of
of reaping a rich harvest of the previous metals.”