No. 19
               
            
            
            
            
               In my letter No 15 of the 
22nd of July I made known to Her
               Majesty's Government that a not unreasonable degree of alarm existed in
               the minds of the inhabitants of this Colony, in consequence of the great
               number of northern Indians congregated in the settlements.  A gang of
               
Queen Charlotte Islanders, who had been several months 
resident
resident here,
               soon after the date of that communication, attacked and nearly destroyed
               a native "Cowegin" village situated about 50 miles north of this place.
               The "Cowegins" few in number fought desperately and were all slaughtered
               on the spot; and the assailants made off toward their own country with a
               number of captive women and children.
               
               When tidings of that disaster reached the Colony, the remaining
               northern Indians, though still numerous were greatly alarmed, and the
               Cowegins incensed by the loss of their friends, were only restrained
               from attacking them en masse, by their respect for Her Majesty's
               Government, and the dread of giving us offence.  They however hovered on
               the borders of the settlements, and shot every northern Indian without
               respect to Tribe or person, who ventured abroad.  In those circumstances
               it became 
necessary
necessary to apply a remedy, as the excited passions of the
               hostile savages would have eventually brought on a collision within the
               limits of the settlements, where the northern Indians had assembled for
               protection, and they were afraid to leave the Colony as the route to
               their distant homes leads directly through the "Cowegin" Country.  There
               was also great cause to fear that so large a number of Indians united by
               a common sense of danger, if permitted to leave in a collective body,
               would in all probability, from a feeling of their own strength, become
               dangerous, and commit numberless depredations on the less powerful
               native Tribes of 
Vancouver's Island, who might be surprised and cut off
               in detail.
               
               I therefore adopted a plan which without displeasing the Cowegin
               Tribe, was considered by the northern Indians as a mark of peculiar
               
favor
favor; this was to despatch them on their return homeward, under the
               escort of the Hudson's Bay Company's Steamer "
Otter," and according to
               that arrangement, fifteen large canoes manned with about 300 northern
               Indians were sent away from this place on the morning of the 
7th of
                  August, and were conducted as far as 
River de Grullas, about 150 miles
               north of 
Victoria, where they were left to make their own way.  The
               Colony was thus delivered from the greater number of the northern Tribes
               who have been resident at this place since the end of spring, and I am
               in hopes they will not renew their visits next year, in bodies so
               formidable.
               
               Admiral Bruce proposes to prolong his stay till the first week in
               
September, and one of the ships will remain here after his departure for
               the protection of the Colony.
               
 
            
            
               The House of Assembly was opened on the 12th of the present
               month.  The affair passed off quietly, and did not appear to excite much
               interest among the lower orders.
               
            
            
            
            
               J.S. Helmcken has been elected speaker of the House, but nothing
               further has been done; in consequence of objections having been raised
               to the validity of the election in one instance, and to the property
               qualification in two cases, making three out of the seven members,
               against whose return, petitions have been sent in, leaving only the
               speaker and three members at liberty to act, and that number is
               insufficient to form a Committee of enquiry, the House therefore hardly
               know how to get over the difficulty.  One of the petitions is evidently
               got up for mere party purposes, and if that were withdrawn 
there
there would
               be four members and the speaker, who might proceed to regulate the
               affairs of the house.  In the Territorial Governments of the United
               States, the practice in such cases, is for the Governor to grant
               certificates of qualification to a majority of the Members; who then
               proceed to constitute the house, but I am not certain if such a course
               would be in harmony with English law; nevertheless if the House should
               appeal to me on the subject, I will have recourse to that expedient.
               
 
            
            
               I have the honor to be Sir
               
               Your most obedient humble Servant
               
               
James Douglas
               
               Governor
               
               
               
               
The Right 
Honble Henry Labouchere Esq
re
               
               Her Majesty's principal Secretary of State
               
               For the Colonial Department.
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     Mr Merivale
                     
                     Approve, I presume, of the measures taken by the Governor for
                     getting rid of the Northern Indians, and approve also his speech
                     on opening the two Houses of the Legislature.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     The Governor seems to differ very much from his employers the
                     HBC about the advantages of the Reciprocity Treaty.
                     
                  
                  
                     I am sure I do not know how he is to get over the difficulty
                     about constituting a quorum of his House of Assembly but we can
                     only say that we wait for his next report on that subject.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
               Documents enclosed with the main document (not transcribed)
               
                
                  
                  
                     Speech by 
Douglas opening the Legislative Assembly, 
12 August 1856.
                     
                     
 
            
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Ball,  John
                        
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Bruce, Vice Admiral Henry William
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Helmcken, John S.
                  
                        Houstoun, Captain Wallace
                        
                  Kennedy, John Frederick
                  Labouchere, Henry
                  Langford, Edward Edwards
                  Merivale, Herman
                  
                        Muir,  John
                        
                  Pemberton, Joseph Despard
                  
                        Skinner, Reverend Thomas James
                        
                  Yates, James
                
               
                  Vessels in this document
                  HMS Alarm, 1845-1904
                  HMS Brisk, 1851-1870
                  HMS Monarch, 1832-1866
                  Otter, 1852-1861
                  HMS Trincomalee, 1817 - present
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Cowichan Region
                  Englishman River
                  Esquimalt
                  Esquimalt Harbour
                  Haida Gwaii
                  Nanaimo
                  Sooke
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria