No. 15
I have the honor of enclosing herewith Minutes of the proceedings
in the Council of
Vancouver's Island on the
4th and
9th of June
last. I stated in my communication of the
7th of June the subjects
which had been laid before the Council on the 4
th of that month. The
propositions in respect to the convening and
constitutionconstitution of the
Assembly were approved and passed without alteration, at the meeting of
the
9th of June.
In order to suit the circumstances of the Colony, the property
qualification of Members was limited to the ownership of 300, of
freehold estate or upwards.
To have fixed upon a higher standard of qualification, would
have disqualified all the present representatives,
leaving no disposable persons to replace them, and it appeared to me
impolitic, as well as unconstitutional, to dispense altogether with the
property qualification.
You will observe by the said Minutes that absentee Proprietors of
Freehold estates are allowed to vote through their resident Agents or
Attorneys, after the example of
British Guiana.
The division of the settlements into four electoral Districts,
admits of a
moremore equal representation, and has given more general satisfaction to the Colonists,
than a single Poll opened in any one District.
The electors are so few in number that the returns were mere
nominations in all the Districts, with the exception of
Victoria, where
the contest was stoutly maintained by no fewer than five rival
candidates.
The elections are now over, and the Assembly is convened for the
12th day of August next.
Since I had last the honor of addressing you, my time and attention
have been seriously occupied in providing for the peace and security of
the settlements, in consequence of the great numbers of northern
savages, who have been, this season, crowding into the Colony.
Anxiety on the score of the Indians.
The presence of those people has excited a well grounded apprehension of
danger in the minds of the Colonists; but I am thankful
thatthat they have
hitherto been kept under proper restraint. Our situation may however be
compared to a smouldering volcano, which at any moment may burst into
fatal activity.
None of Her Majesty's Ships have yet arrived here, as we
expected from
Admiral Bruce's last communication.
The Adm
y have said that vessels of war shall be sent to the Colony.
The "
Alarm" was to be there [by?]
July—& the Admiral himself shortly
after.
It may probably interest Her Majesty's Government to learn that
some very fine specimens of scale Gold have been lately discovered in
one of the Tributary Streams of
Fraser's River, at a considerable
distance from the sea coast.
The persons who made the discovery propose to continue the search
for gold, as soon as the river which, was then in a swollen state, falls
to its lowest level, and I will do myself the honor of informing you of
the result of their explorations. The search for Gold has not been
continued with activity on
Vancouver's Island, neither does it appear
that the Gold
DistrictDistrict in the Upper Columbia, referred to in my letter
of the
16th April last, has been found productive, as the ascertained export of Gold from that quarter for
the last five months is only about 220 ounces.
The high state of the auriferous mountain streams, usual in the
early months of summer, may probably have hindered the miners from
working with their customary activity, but whether that or the limited
extent of the gold District, be the real cause of their want of success,
is a matter of conjecture, as I have received no reliable information on
the subject.
I have the honor to be Sir
Your most obedient humble Servant
James Douglas
Governor
Minutes by CO staff
Mr Merivale
Copy to the Hudson's Bay C
o of so much as relates to the convening of
the Assembly & the Gold finding.
2.
Governor Douglas has been requested not to blend different
subjects in the same despatch.
3. The Admiral on the Station was expected to be at
VanCouver
the end of
July.
Copy to HBC and acknowledge.
I doubt the legality of fixing a property qualification for the
members—but it is scarcely desirable to interfere?
Other documents included in the file
Draft,
Elliot to
John Shepherd, Hudson's Bay Company,
23 October
1856, forwarding copy of the despatch and enclosures.
Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
Proclamation issued by
Douglas,
16 June 1856, convening of General
Assembly.
Minutes of Council, 4 June and 9 June 1856, as per despatch.
People in this document
Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
Bruce, Vice Admiral Henry William
Douglas, Sir James
Elliot, Thomas Frederick
Labouchere, Henry
Merivale, Herman
Shepherd, Captain John
Shepherd, Captain, HBC Governor John
Vessels in this document
HMS Alarm, 1845-1904
Places in this document
Fraser River
Guyana
Vancouver Island
Victoria