 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     
                     July 6, 1852
                     
                     My Dear Uncle 
Boys,
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     I hope you will be ready to 
forgive me for my 
unpardonable
                     remissness in never having had the grace to send you even the shadow of
                     an epistle from this chaplaincy which, I may say, you were principally
                     instrumental in originating. You would not be much surpised at my
                     disinclination for enjoying in correspondence, if you could be present
                     in my house for one month, or even one week, be a witness of the various
                     kinds of occupation that I have within such a period to undertake.
                     There is the school, the ministry, the Colony, my neighbours, strangers,
                     English & American, the natives, helping 
Emma to make the bed, sending
                     one of my pupils with an Indian servant to 
try to get meat for
                     the day, trading venision, partridges, salmon, mats, baskets, berries
                     &c., &c., &c., with Indians, cutting up a deer, a quarter of beef, or a
                     sheep, teaching the Indians how to cook it, occasionally going into the
                     kitchen to see that all is going on right, preparing & mixing
                     ingredients for soup, gardening, including fensing, breaking up the
                     ground, procuring from all quarters of the globe, or saving seeds,
                     going to gather peas, cut cabbages, attending to their being properly
                     boiled, for 
Emma cannot eat meat well without vegetables, & cannot eat
                     them unless nicely cooked, making sauce if we have time a[nd] materials;
                     considering, when a vessel is going

 to the 
Sandwich Islands, what
                     articles of use in the Domestic economy, it may be proper to try to
                     procure these, or at other times how to invent substitutes for them,
                     attending to the poultry, gathering the eggs, setting the hens,
                     registering the time of incubation of each, feeding the chickens, also
                     the dogs; this brings me perhaps to dinner time. then you have
                     doubtless heard that I have lately become a Bonâ fide
                     Colonist having taken a claim of about 400 acres within 1 mile & 3
                     furlongs of the fort. This takes up some more of my time at present,
                     but I intend it to abridge my labours by-and-bye. For some months we
                     have supplied ourselves with milk & butter, & very soon we shall have
                     our own meat altogether, pork beef & mutton; also our own potatoes, so
                     that instead of buying 200 bushels every season of Indians, in lots from
                     2 or 3 to 10 or 12 bushels at a time, from 
Oct. to 
Feb.y, all of which I
                     have to stand by to see weighted myself,—we shall have from the farm
                     all we want & some hundreds or thousands of bushels to sell.
                     
                     Perhaps you would like to have some idea of the stock on the land.
                     Well then there are 10 cows with their calves, 3 yearlings of oxen, 31
                     head in all, 3 mares 1 horse and 2 other horses bought for me at
                     
Nisqually, but not yet arrived, about 20 pigs, including 11 or 12 sows,
                     all the produce of 1 sow which I bought in 
1850, & which is the finest
                     in 
Vancouver's Island. These 20 pigs 
wd average now from 150 to 200
                     lbs. each. In about 6 weeks or 2 months we expect the stock will
                     increase to about 80 or 90.
                     
                     There is a dairy built,

 a store-house, a
                     fowl-house, a piggery, an enclosure for driving in the cattle, 2
                     dwelling houses, each with 2 windows & a chimney, but with only one
                     room. These will hereafter have the windows abstracted & be turned
                     into cattle-sheds. They are all build of wood. There is wood already
                     squared for building a good dwelling house, but this I do not intend to
                     erect this year. There is a portion of land of about 25 acres nearly
                     enclosed with a strong fence, about 9 acres of which are ploughed & sown
                     with wheat, oats, barley, pease, potates & turnips, though from the
                     fence not being conpleted in time this will nearly be all destroyed by
                     the irruptions of cattle. However there will be at least all this under
                     crop next hear, if we live & prosper. I think you would be much
                     interested in coming & giving a peep at us.
                     
                     I really should seriously be delighted if you would come & settle
                     here with us. There certainly is a feild for another clergyman; there
                     is even an absolute & an urgent necessity for 4 or 5 more upon the
                     Island. But there is no support for one at present. There is a
                     Clergy-reserve, but without some capital to improve it & some interested
                     persons to manage it & look aout after it, it is useless.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     My reason for taking so much load & setting to work at once upon it
                     upon so great a scale, is very much

 owing to my anxious desire to
                     promote the specitual welfare of 
the Island, for in about 3 years, this
                     land will produce a revenue of from £500 to £70. per annum clear, if
                     
the Island has the slightest chance given to it by the Colonial
                     Authorities, I mean those in England. At present it is true its chances
                     are very small.
                     
                     The following table will serve to give you some idea of the
                     increase of stock in 3 or 4 years. I must premise that the climate &
                     soil are excellent & casualties with the calves are unknown. I have at
                     present as follows. (Of the calves I am not aware at present what are
                     male what female. I shall suppose them =.)
                     
                     1852. 10 Cow.  2 yearling heifer. 10 calves havin. 5 ox-calves & 1 besides
                     
                     1853 may be expected
                     
                     10 cow.  2 heifer.  5 yearling d. 10 calve. 5
                     
                     1854 12 cow.  5 heifer.  5 yearling d. 12 calve. 6
                     
                     1855 17 cow.  5 heifer.  6 yearling d. 17 calve. 9
                     
                     1856 22 cow.  6 heifer.  8 yearling d. 22 calve. 11
                     
                     To people in England, who, having high rents to pay for their land,
                     and oblige[d] to part with their stock as it increases year by year, I
                     believe this rapid multiplication after a few years seldom occurs. The
                     same rule applies to horses. Pigs increase with far greater rapidity.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     [Marginal note: For Hudson's Bay Co.] The great difficulty here
                     is to procure labour at a moderate price; and this difficulty can never
                     end until the price of land on 
Vancouver's Island is reduced so as to
                     bring it nearer to an equality with that in 
Oregon. At present if I
                     chose to cross to the other side of the straits, I could have 320 acres
                     for 
nothing but residence, choosing where I liked in
                     unappropriated land; and previously to 
Dec. 1850 or 
1851, I might have
                     had 640. This

 will last 3 or 4 years longer; and even then the land
                     will be purchasable for $1.25 or 5
s/- an acre.
                     
                     These circumstances thus operate upon the Colony of 
Vancouver's Island, which is distant from the Coast of 
Oregon only from 8 or 10 to
                     15 or 20 miles, a distance which people are continually traversing
                     summer & winter in canoes; (I have done it myself, and am intending to
                     do it again next week. When labourers are brought to 
the Island, which
                     can only be effected at great expense—an expense which no man of sane
                     mind knowing the circumstances' of the Colony, at present would risk.
                     They soon learn that, by just crossing the straits & stating before a
                     magistrate their intention to become Citizens of the U.S., they will
                     become entitled to 160 acres of land gratis & if they marry, to 320, any
                     time they choose to settle until 
1. Dec. 1855. Consequently finding
                     their chance of ever becoming proprietors here, with land at £1 an acre,
                     tied down as it is by conditions, which do not allow a man more than 20
                     acres except he import English labourers at the rate of 1 man for every
                     20 acres (this condition the Company are wisely blinking at [at]
                     present, otherwise they would not have one private proprieter of more
                     than 20 acres on 
the Island at this moment, which they are aware of no
                     doubt,) which to a labouring man is of course impossible; finding

 I say
                     that the chance of their ever becoming independent is very minute & so
                     remote as to vanish into nothing, they naturally become dissatisfied.
                     As long as they remain they work, if at all, disaffectedly, with murmurs
                     & grumblings, & at last they apply downright for their discharge. If
                     this is refused they take the first opportunity, & cross over to the
                     other side, where their accession is hailed with joy & triumph, & they
                     feel themselves what they call 
free, i.e. free from the H.B.
                     
Coy, for they never feel themselves otherwise than free as
                     Englishmen; but this term 
free is applied amongst the Company's
                     servants to those whose time of service is expired, or whose engagment
                     is terminated. Moreover proprietors of land in 
Oregon not having to pay
                     anything for it, are able to spend more money in improving it, &
                     consequently to give higher wages for labour. This is an additional
                     source of dissatisfaction amonst the men here, & another incitement to
                     leave.
                     
                     The beneficial consequences of all these advantages to 
Oregon
                     soon reacting, contribute to operate as a new cause of prosperity, for
                     the population increasing, & merchants & mechanics & artisans of all
                     descriptions being attracted amongst them, the agriculturists have a
                     more extensive & immediate & a surer market

 for their produce, besides
                     the many incidental advantages resulting in a new country from a rapidly
                     increasing population, & a rapidly extending spirit of enterprise. In
                     any part of 
Vancouver's Island at the present moment, I do not believe
                     that any general shop-keeper could 
live. There are 2 blacksmiths
                     & 1 carpenter, & 2 ship-carpenters. I know of no more mechanics of any
                     kind.
                     
                     There is little or no inducement at present for any one to come to
                     settle. The 
vis inertice acts with its own peculiar force here as
                     elsewhere. Some of those persons, without any enterprise, who have been
                     brought here by other circumstances, settle here, because they have
                     already some connection with the place. They speculate to the extent of
                     £10 in buying a town-lot 120 feet by 60, & put up some kind of a
                     habitation, hoping some day, if the Colony turns out well (as they say)
                     to sell it at a profit. Other persons settle from an entirely opposite
                     motive. They settle, from a direct and powerful principle of
                     enterprise. They can & do appreciate the natural advantages of the
                     Island; its fine climate, soil, timber & fish, its fine harbours, & its
                     favorable geographical position. There is no harbour North of 
San
                        Francisco until you arrive at 
Esquimalt which is 4 miles from this
                     harbour. They are not ignorant

 of the obstacles thrown in the way of
                     the Colony, particularly by its being given over bound hand & foot to
                     the Hudson's Bay Company. They see all the disadvantages under which it
                     labours, & they must for some time labour with it, but they face them, &
                     trusting that our 
Govt only needs to be informed of its circumstances
                     in order to give them relief, they hope to overcome them.
                     
                     All persons between these two extremes, & all not actuated by this
                     high spirit of patriotism & enterprise in the other, that is to say, the
                     vast majority desert us for 
Oregon, or California. Up to the present
                     moment a large amount of English money has been spent in bringing out
                     British subjects to colonise 
Oregon for the U.S.; whereas Many
                     Englishmen who were attracted to California by the gold, would have
                     preferred to settle here, if it had been possible for them to do so.
                     But I may say they have been driven off 
the Island by the illiberal
                     policy of the 
Govt, and literally in one instance which I am well
                     acquainted with by the jealousy of the Company's agents here, who are
                     afraid of the two great increase of independent Colonists, for this
                     would in

terfere with their present political supremacy. But I must say,
                     because it is an important truth, that as long as this supremacy lasts,
                     the Colony never can progress and prosper, notwithstanding all its
                     natural advantages.
                     
                     [Marginal note. Send to Adm
ty.] Its timber, of which I have
                     already spoken, is fine & admirable, I am told on good authority, for
                     shipping purposes, i.e. for masts &c., beyond parallel. A 
Mr Webster
                     who lived in N. Zealand, 9 years during wh. time he had a contract to
                     supply the British 
Govt with spars, has come up here lately. He says
                     that the timber here is far superior to that of N. Zealand. The reason
                     why he left the latter place was that his establishment at the Bay of
                     Islands, was broken up & all his property destroyed, including his
                     timber—& whaling station, by the war with the natives, after our
                     
Govt took possession. He lost several thousands of pounds & then
                     went to California.
                     
                     A 
Mr Broachie [Brotchie] has been cutting spars up at 
Fort Rupert, and this 
Mr Webster & some others are intending to buy them &
                     send them to England. They are expecting to arrive at 
London in about
                     
Feb. 1853; they design remaining there about 6 weeks, & then returning
                     with a cargo & passengers to this place. The passengers will go where
                     they like. They can either settle here or on the other side; but unless
                     some change is made in the administration of the Colony by our 
Govt
                     in the meantime, they are sure

 to go to 
Oregon. These spars have been
                     seen by the Officers of H.M.S. 
Thetis, which has just been up at 
Fort Rupert. They have told me that they are most extraordinary. One was
                     described to me, as being about 150 feet in length, free from knots,
                     without a single branch for 130 feet, 6 feet in diameter unsquared, &
                     perfectly straight. They saw one squared 110 ft. in length, squared, 38
                     in. in diam. at butt, 28 inches at the top. They say they average
                     nearly 100 ft. in length & from 32 to 36 inches in diam. sq
d. They
                     say they are "unparalleled and unequalled". [Marginal note indicates
                     extract to Admiralty ends but that to HBC continues.]
                     
                     I have given you a pretty extended description of the Colony & the
                     circumstances of Colonists at present, without entering into
                     statistical details. Perhaps an addition in this respect would make it
                     more perfect. There are from 5000 to 6000 acres of land sold to about
                     from 30 to 40 proprietors exclusive of the Company. Of this, upwards of
                     4000 acres lie in the district just round 
Victoria, which for some time
                     was reserved for the Fur-trade, i.e. for the Hudson's Bay Company, &
                     of which they refused to sell any until very lately, and another portion
                     lies within the Puget Sound Association's reserve round 
Esquimalt
                     Harbour. These reserves were excessively pernicious to the Colony.
                     They comprised the districts most eligible for first settlers & amounted
                     to about 30 square miles together. The extent to which they obstructed
                     the sale & settlement of land is proved from the fact that, whereas
                     before these reserves were offered for sale, purchasers came forward at
                     once, myself among the number.
                     [
Blackwood has crossed out the following paragraph.]
                     
                     I had applied nearly 2 years before for a piece of land in the
                     neighbourhood of 
the Fort, in the presence of our late 
Govr Mr
                        Blanshard & 
Capt. Johnson H.M.S. 
Driver, & was refused in their presence
                     by 
Mr Douglas, the land agent. He told me deridingly, when I pointed
                     out how injurious this was, that I might have 100,000 acres at
                     
Mitchowsan or elsewhere "by paying for it & complying with the
                     conditions. As land at 
Mitchowsan, which is

 about 8 miles distant
                     (accross the bay) by water, & 15 miles by land, would have been
                     perfectly useless to me I declined, I 
could not become a
                     proprieter and a Colonist until the Fur-trade reserve was thrown open,
                     when I obtained a claim within 1 1/2 miles of my residence. I have
                     already without paying for the land invested about £400 upon it in
                     stock, implements, buildings, labour &c, indeed nearly £500, although I
                     only took the claim in 
Novr 1851, & did not commence operations until
                     the end of Dec
r. I state this to show my willingness to become a
                     bonâ fida Colonist, & to give an idea of the manner in which the
                     advancement of the Colony has been retarded by the selfish & bad policy
                     of the Company. For my case is only one of many. "Ex uno disce omnes."
                     I may also say to those who are wise enough & willing to learn, "Ex pede
                     Herculem."
                     
                     The leaving the conditions in obeyance has also contributed
                     considerably to the formation of a settlement, for compliance with them
                     as I have stated above is absolutely impossible. But their very
                     existence is wrong, except they be universally suspended. In truth I
                     should rather say they are only partially in obeyance, for the land
                     agent has it in his power to enforce them, & being 
Govr as well, &
                        Chief Factor of the Company, he may use them as means of persecution or
                     of indulging private resentment, or throwing difficulties into the way
                     of persons competing, or likely to compete with the Company or interfere
                     with their trade. The general feeling of all persons independent of the
                     Company here, & of many who are in their service is in ac

cordance with
                     the representation I have made, as our late 
Govr Mr Blanshard, I
                     am sure, well knows, (& to him I would appeal for proof,) & a 
Govt
                     Commissioner 
wd find, if he were to come & make investigation on the
                     spot. 
Adml Moresby also, I believe, must be well acquainted with the
                     correctness & justice of my statement.
                     
                     I could say a good deal more upon the subject if I had time, but
                     unfortunately my time is so taken up with other matters, that it is not
                     in my power to put on record all I know about the Colony, its condition,
                     prospects & proceedings.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     I hope the present Government will evince a greater interest in
                     
this Island, than has been manifested hitherto. I believe they can
                     scarcely be aware of its importance & of its natural capabilities. If
                     we had but a 
Govt independent of the Company, and a regular & due
                     administration of justice, which, I may say, is unknown at present, now
                     that the Reserve is, even though but partially, thrown open, & the
                     impracticalbe & crushing conditions left neglected, 
the Island could
                     make a rapid advance in prosperity, that is provided also the price of
                     the land were reduced. This is necessary to complete its chances of
                     sucess as a Colony; though even without this, if we had

 but an
                     independent 
Govt, connected directly with the Colonial authorities
                     in England, a great improvement would be made. [Next sentence
                     underlined by 
Blackwood]. As it is the people in general would be glad
                     that 
the Island should be annexed to the U.S. Here is a Colony
                     professedly independent, with its Governor a Chief Factor of the H.B.C.,
                     2 members of the Council out of 3 Chief Traders, & the remaining one a
                     ship-master often absent. Even he was appointed by the former 
Govr
                     Mr Blanshard. Had not he appointed him, the three, which number is
                     necessaary to form a quorum, would doubtlelssly have been all members of
                     the Company's trade, sharing in its profits, their income depending on
                     the amount of the Annual divident. The 
Govr is at this moment away
                     in the Company's fur-trade at 
Fort Langley, whither he has gone as Chief
                     Factor, to meet what they call the 
brigade, that is, the party
                     bringing the annual collection of furs from the interior, the country
                     called 
New Caledonia, lying N. of 
Oregon & W. of the 
Rocky Mountains.
                     [Marginal note. If the writer is as respectable a man as his
                     profession, and his Letter 
wd lead one to suppose he was he would
                     make a good addition to the Council. 
ABd]
                     
                     One of the fundamental articles of the Charter granting the
                     constitution of 
the Island, is, that its ports & harbours shall be free
                     to the inhabitants & to all nations either trading or seeking shelter
                     therein. [Remainder of paragraph struck out by 
Blackwood]. A few weeks
                     ago, the 
Govr Mr Douglas, stated to 
Mr Tod, the Sen
r Member
                     of Council, that he was going to bring forward a measure in council,
                     proposing to establish a duty

 of 5 per cent. on imports. He expressed
                     his dissent. 
Mr Douglas argued and persuaded, but 
Tod was
                     invincible. At length 
Mrr Douglas stated, as if this, he thought,
                     would settle the matter, "but 
The Company wish it, 
Tod;
                     
The Company wish it." This is the free & independent Colony that is
                     to govern & tax itself. This 
Tod told his fellow Member of Council
                     
Cooper, & 
Cooper told me. I believe it to be perfectly true. The
                     measure was brought forward, & 
Mr Douglas stated that the Compnay
                     offered it to the Colony as a boon, for, that as they were & must be for
                     some time the principal importers, they would be gratuitously conferring
                     upon the exchequer of the Colony about £1500 per annum, the amount they
                     would have to pay. What ignorance of one of the first & most obvious
                     principles of political economy, is displayed by one party, or supposed
                     to belong to the other.
                     [Marginal note. If the preceding passage were sent to the H.B.C. it
                     
wd lead to the discovery of the writer. 
ABd]
                     
                     However I must now turn to another subject. You are of course
                     aware of the great state of excitement & ajitation existing in this part
                     of the world. These discoveries of gold all round the Pacific have as
                     it were completely intoxicated almost the entire community, so that it
                     is very difficult to make a serious & calm estimate of the condition of
                     the countries round about us, or of the people inhabiting them. During
                     this year we have heard of the immense discoveries in Western Australia,
                     which have attracted thither many who were formerly wanderers in
                     California.
                     
                  
                  
                  
                     But all this was not it seems enough. It is now ascertained that
                     
Queen Charlotte's Island, the large Island just North

 West of us, also
                     abounds in the precious metal, as well as in other valuable menerals,
                     copper & antimony, &, I am told, lead & silver. Of the gold, copper &
                     antimony I have several specimens. Of the former, that is, of gold, I
                     have already sent [
Blackwood underlines to end of 
Miller] on two
                     occasions some which have been forwarded to the 
Govt  They both went
                     thro' 
Genl Miller. [Not received at C.O. 
ABd]
                     
                     It was this that brought the 
Thetis up here. I saw some specimens
                     of the gold as far back as 
March or 
April 1851, & in 
August or 
Septr
                     I forwarded two to 
Genl Miller, H.B.M. Consul 
Genl of the Pacific,
                     at the 
Sandwich Islands. He informed [me] in 
October that he had
                     forwarded one of them together with an extra 1 from my letter to the
                     Foreign Office. 
Genl Miller had previously requested me to give him
                     all the information I could, concerning this part of the Coast, & 
Q.C.
                        Island particularly.
                     
                     The Coy's agents here had been active in getting all the gold they
                     could by trading it with the natives & visiting the spot where it had
                     been discovered; or perhaps, I 
shd rather say, 
one of the
                     spots; for it is my belief that the Natives have discovered it elsewhere
                     besides. I believe some of this gold was sent from here to England,
                     consigned to the H.B. Company by their agents here, in the 
Norman Morison, in 
Sept. 1850. I am under this impression and I am pretty sure
                     I am correct in saying so.
                     
                     About 
July, 1851 they sent the 
Una, under the command of 
Capt.
                        Mitchell, to the spot. One Englishman, who had been in California,
                     named 
W'm Rowland, & who had become owner of a little sloop of 40 tons,
                     the 
Georgiana of Sydney, went in the 
Una as a Volunteer, but really to
                     get accurate information. He returned in the vessel in 
Septr or
                     
Octr, with several specimens, of which I procured some. The
                     information brought was of such a nature that the 
Una was immediately
                     fitted out again & despatched for the purpose of obtaining all they
                     could. 
Rowland now separated from the 
Una, & by going to 
Olympia, which
                     is at the S. extremity of 
Puget Sound, & exhibiting his specimens, &
                     relating the results of his experience, he gained a party of some 25 men
                     to go with him, which they did about the end of 
Octr or

 beginning of
                     
Novr, after the 
Una.
                     
                     In 
Decr another vessel the 
Damariscove,
                     belonging to two persons, named 
Palmer & 
Balch, trading between 
Puget
                        Sound & 
San Francisco, was despatched from the latter place to 
Puget
                        Sound; but the owners having been informed by friends in 
Oregon of the
                     discovery of gold on 
Q.C. Island, they thought they might as well just
                     pass 
the straits of Juan de Fuca, & for the sake of a few days' farther
                     passage, have the advantage of ocular evidence. There being only 7
                     persons in all on board, & the Natives reputed to be savage & Fierce,
                     they did not intend to attempt to do more than obtain reliable
                     information.
                     
                     On arriving at this spot, they found the 
Una had left, & they were
                     warned by a paper with the signature of 
Capt. Mitchell, which was
                     brought on board by the Indians, & was supposed 
by them to be a
                     
letter of recommendation, by no means to trust them. Fortunately
                     they attended to the warning in good time, for in the morning when they
                     were sailing away, they saw canoes pulling towards them containing about
                     200 men.
                     
                     Just before they left, they received from some Indians, a scrap of
                     paper from 
Rowland, written on with a pencil, which informed them that
                     the 
Georgiana had been wrecked on the other, i.e. the East side of 
the
                        Island, & that all the party were captives in the hands of the Indians,
                     who had stripped them of everything. The 
Damariscove sailed for
                     
Olympia, 
Puget Sound, immed
ly & gave information of the wreck, &c.
                     
                     The U.S. Collector of customs, 
Mr Moses, at once chartered the
                     
Damariscove as a Revenue Vessel, & fitted her out under the U.S. flag,
                     sending a small party of Military, 
Lieut. Dement & 4 or 5 privates, with
                     10 volunteers, to undertake the redemption, or rescue, (though the
                     latter in a hostile manner was not to be thought of, as it was rather
                     dangerous than otherwise) of the

 captives. They put in here on their
                     way to purchase blanckets &c., wherewith to buy the men from the Indians.
                     
                     Mr Moses sent 
here to buy the necessary blankets, because
                     
Qn Charlotte's Island being British Territory, they did not wish to
                     have any cause of complaint arise from the British Authorities, through
                     their introducing 
American goods; and they were the more careful
                     in using this precaution, because they themselves had been extremely
                     particular in enforcing their own Customs's laws, and by most strictly
                     following out the letter of them, had seized & Condemned two or three
                     British vessels just before, the Company's among the number.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     Another Amer
n vessel, the 
Exact, had set off for 
Qn
                        Ch. Island during the interval in 
Novr, containing English &
                     Americans, & amongst others, a man named 
Jeal, who was in my service
                     at the time. When the 
Damariscove returned this vessel had not been
                     heard of, & was supposed, through some peices of plank & other remains
                     of a vessel being picked up on the S.W. side of this Island, to have
                     suffered ship-wreck. I was informed

 that 
Mr Palmer was here without
                     any place of shelter, there being no houses of public entertainment here
                     at that time, & therefore I invited him to remain at my house the few
                     days he intended to stay. He had come so far in the ship because the
                     health of 
Capt. Balch, his partner, was in a precarious state when they
                     left 
Olympia, & he thought it advisable to accompany him. however
                     before the vessel left here, he had so far recovered as to be able to
                     venture to proceed alone. 
Mr Palmer therefore stayed until he had an
                     opportunity of finding some conveyance for crossing the straits &
                     returning to his home, 
Port Steilacoom, 
Puget Sound.
                     
                     I derived a great deal of information from him whilst he was here.
                     Amongst other things he infomed me that he had heard on very good
                     authority in 
San Francisco that the H.B.Co. had been or were applying to the British 
Govt, for a cession of 
Qn Ch. Island, without saying why they wanted it, & of course without informing them of the discovery
                     of gold upon it. From my own experience knowing this to be highly
                     probable I judged it proper to take means of giving our 
Govt intelligence, as soon as I had

 good ground to go on. This was soon
                     afforded me.
                     
                     A day or two before Christmas day 
Mr. Kennedy, Chief Trader H.B.C.,
                     who had left 
Fort Simpson to come & settle here, arrived here, having
                     left the 
Una, in which he had come down (after leaving the 
Gold harbour,
                     she visited 
Ft Simpson) at 
Cape Flattery, & came on from thence in a
                     Canoe. In about 10 days, another vessel came in, named the 
Susan Sturges, under American colours. When we saw this new vessel enter the
                     harbour we thought it was either another adventurer on her way to 
Q.C.
                     after gold, or the 
Exact returned. It had been blowing very heavy gales
                     during the week, which accounted for the 
Una's not arriving, as we
                     supposed she would not leave 
Neah Bay (you will require a good map or
                     chart for this letter), which is close to 
Cape Flattery, in such
                     weather. Judge of our regret & grief when we heard that the 
Una had
                     been wrecked & poor 
Mitchell had nearly lost his life among the Indians on shore at 
Neah Bay.
                     
                     The ship was anchored in the bay, and was safe
                     for some time, but after

 the gale had been blowing a long time very
                     violently from one quarter, during which time the vessel was in a safe
                     position, lying to leeward of a protecting point, the wind suddenly
                     shifted to another quarter, from which the vessel had no protection &
                     blew if possible with increased violence.
                     
                     The 
Damariscove, on her way here to 
Q.C. Island, & the 
Susan Sturges, on her way from 
San Francisco to 
Olympia, were fortunately in
                     the bay at the same time. They had got in before the weather became so
                     very bad & so were able to take up good positions. The 
Una had no
                     choice. She could not reach the place where they were anchored. She
                     was finally driven ashore almost out of the water. The Indians, who
                     were infuriated & beyond the control of their chiefs (or one chief
                     called Cape Flattery Jack, possibly the others Cleessit, or Classet, was
                     as bad as they) plundered the ship & the people who went ashore, stabbed 
the Indian Woman, the mother of 
Mr Kennedy's children, who had been
                     left on board, & finally set the ship on fire. When the 
Susan Sturges
                     sailed away for this place with the 
Una's people on board, the 
Una was
                     in flames.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     Poor 
Mitchell never got over it. They saved some of the stores &
                     the gold belonging to the Company. Had not those other two vessels been
                     there, the whole of them would have been probably massacred. Some of
                     the men lost their all. One man, a native of 
Cephalonia, named 
Cosmos
                        Gabriellet, lost 300$ which he had saved from his wages. Others lost
                     their money, their clothes, & all the gold they had privately collected.
                     One man, named 
John Crittle, had his jacket cut thro' the breast with a
                     knife, in an attempt to stab him. They were taken off by the boats of
                     the other vessels. I received several specimens from different
                     individuals & some valuable ones I bought, one for £5, one for £4 &
                     another for £1; and some others worth more than £1 were given to me.
                     
                     I now received exact information from the eye-witnesses about 
Q.C.
                        Island. The 
Una had taken up one miner, named 
John McGregor, who
                     had come out to work the coal, in company with the 
Muirs; they made 4
                     blasts; the last time the blast produced I have been assured £230 worth
                     of gold. But the Indians contested the possession of the gold with the
                     
Una's people. They scrambled, struggled & fought for it. 
McGregor
                     was going

 to pick up one valuable peice, when it was seized by an
                     Indian; he ran after him & tried to get it away. They surrounded him,
                     threw him down, held him down by his hair, brandished their long knives
                     over him, & 
wd have cut off his head, but that the wives of some of
                     their chiefs were on board the ship, which was close alongside, so close
                     that some of the frayments of rock & gold, as it showered into the sea,
                     fell upon her deck. One of the chiefs proposed to 
McGregor that
                     after a blast was made, they should divide the proceeds, & avowed his
                     great liberality in allowing to 
McGregor for the larger share; for
                     that he 
wd only take the yellow metal, while 
McGregor shd have all the bulk of the rock.
                     
                     It was so evidently impossible to succeed without bloodshed that
                     the Coy's agent, in charge of the exped
n (for 
Mitchell merely
                     navigated the vessel) thought it proper to desist. So they left the
                     place although 
Mr Douglas, now the 
Govr of 
Vancouver's Island had
                     ordered them to remain 6 months & had had the vessel fitted out &
                     provisioned for that time. No doubt 
Mr McNeill, who was in
                     charge, did well not to proceed to bloodshed, as it would have become a
                     very grave matter in that case; for certainly 
the Island belonging not
                     to the Company but to the Crown, the gold most certainly

 is not their
                     property; and they would have been placed in a very serious posture, if
                     they had murdered the natives to possess themselves of gold which
                     belonged not to them but to the Crown.
                     
                     Although the 
Una was lost 
Mr Douglas did not intend to give up
                     the gold. About that time, the end of 
Decr, an American vessel the
                     
Orbit, put in her, in her way from 
Olympia to 
Honolulu. In the
                     same gale which ruined the 
Una, she was blown ashore, lost her rudder &
                     was otherwise damaged. 
Mr Douglas bought her & proceded to fit her
                     out, under the name of the 
Recovery, for 
Qn Charlotte's
                        Island, wither she has accordingly proceeded under the command of
                     Mitchell.
                     
                     Being aware of this intention, and also of the fact of several
                     other vessels fitting out for the same place both in 
Oregon & 
San Francisco, English as well as American, I thought it my duty to acquaint
                     the English 
Govt with the circumstances, for although it was doubtless
                     the duty of 
the Govr of 
Vancouver's Island to do all he could to
                     protect the interests of the British Crown & Nation, & to give them full
                     information, I knew it was highly improbable he would do so, both from
                     my own knowledge of his personal character, & also of the in

fluence
                     which his private connexion with the Hudson's Bay Company, and his
                     participation in their trade & profits, would exert over the
                     obligations of his public duty as 
Govr. The positive information
                     too which I had 
recd about the application of the 
Coy for 
the
                        Island, seemed to me to confirm the necessity for some one to give
                     intelligence in the proper quarters. If 
Mr Douglas gave information
                     as well, no harm 
wd be done, and if he did not, why then it was necessary some one else should.
                     
                     I therefore wrote to the British Consul at 
San Francisco,
                     suggesting to him the propriety of at once acquainting 
Adml Moresby
                     with the matter; which he did, forwarding to him a copy of my letter.
                     Within a 1/4 hour after receiving it, which he did at 
Calao, in 
April,
                     he ordered the 
Thetis to come up immed
ly. They arrived here 
24th
                        May on their way up, the 
Captain (Kuper), having asked permission to put
                     in here, & try to get some charts or information about the precise
                     locality of the harbour, for no man-of-war had been there before.
                     
                     They remained here until 
7th June when they proceeded to the
                     
gold harbour Mitchell's Harbour the inner portion of which they named
                     
Thetis Cove; this branches off from the South side from a channel which
                     runs deeply, 6 or 7 miles into 
Qn Charlott's Island. This Channel,
                     
Moore's Channel bends to the N.W. & returns to the sea forming an
                     island, which they named 
Kuper Island. They saw one peice of gold
                     weighing 22 oz. The people had not been successful in finding it so as
                     to answer their expectations. There had been 7 or 8 vessels there, but
                     the most of them failing in finding the gold, had departed. The
                     
Recovery was there, blasting & trading. They bought specimens for the
                     
govt.
                     
                     I sent some of my specimens to 
Genl Miller by the 
Mary Dare in
                     
April. I advised

 him to choose one piece for himself, to send the next
                     largest to our Gov
t, & the next to 
Adml Moresby, & to let the
                     Adm
l also have a sight of 
his own piece. I have 
recd from
                     him a long letter, acknowledging the receipt of my
                     "
valuable specimens" &c. He had forwarded the Adm
sl's, &
                     
wd forward the other to the 
Govt by the first safe
                     opportunity. I suppose they 
wd receive the first, which was a small
                     inconsiderable peice, & only of worth 
as a specimen, about 
Jany or 
Feby last.
                     
                     I have written at great length a sketch of
                     
the discovery of gold on Queen Charlotte's Island. I suppose it
                     will be the first authentic one that will reach England. You may make
                     what use of it you please. I thought it might not be unacceptable for
                     you to be made the depository of the intelligence. By-and-bye of course
                     there will be official reports; but except 
Capt. Kuper had orders from
                     the Adm
l to make a report immed
ly directly to the 
Govt,
                     without waiting to meet 
with him & send it 
thro' him, you will
                     have it first, as I imagine this letter will be forwarded from 
San Francisco.
                     
                     You may observe some few corrections in figures & otherwise in the
                     course of the letter. It has been read by some of the officers of the
                     
Thetis, & I found two or three

 mistakes in the description of the gold
                     region in 
Q.C. Island, and in the dimensions of the spars lying at 
Fort Rupert, on this Island. I believe now that all I have said is correct, & may be relied on.
                     
                     
                     This letter is so long, it is impossible for me to copy it. If you
                     think it may afford any information of interest to her Majesty's
                     
Govt, as it probably may, particularly with respect to 
Qn
                        Charlotte's Island, I should suggest the propriety of your taking the
                     proper measures for laying it before them. The information which has
                     reached them at present, will have been thro' the Amiralty & the
                     Foreign Office; but it properly belongs to the Colonial department. I
                     directed the Greek seaman I have mentioned to lay his beautiful
                     specimens before Lord Palmerston for inspection. He went hence to
                     
London in the 
Norman Morison, which sailed from here, 
21st Jany
                        1852. 
Captain Kuper was present when a blast was made & obtained some
                     fine specimens for the Gov
t, but of course they cannot reach them
                     yet.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     You will now I am sure excuse my leaving off. We are pretty well.
                     I should be glad if some arrangement could be made to supply me
                     regularly with papers, as I only get a few news then  by fits &
                     starts. I could easily remit the money for them, if I knew how much
                     
wd be necessary. I 
shd like the Times, second hand & the
                     Illustrated London News. Many thanks for your very interesting, useful,
                     & I should say, decisive book "4 ward for the Church." The views
                     therein exprssed are my own. What are 
Hobart Seymour's books. They
                     seem to be highly spoken of. Popery is going fowward here as elsewhere.
                     A Bishop of 
Vancouver's Island has just arrived, & taken 300 acres of
                     land within about 4 or 5 miles of 
the Fort. I am going to make an
                     application to the Colonial Church & School Society for assistance with
                     respect to a school. I have secured 5 acres of land close to 
the Fort,
                     which I have bought for £25, for the purpose. 

Why do they not send us a Bishop of the Established Church. This is just what is wanted.
                     I am
                     very much opposed by the Company's Agents, who wish to administer every
                     department, but by the blessing of God, if I live, I shall succeed. I
                     know I am working in a good cause. They have built no church nor
                     chapel, nor a [Editorial note: transcription ends.]