No. 15
1. Since I had last the honor of addressing you in my Despatch
N
o 35 of the
29th of December last,
in reference to the discovery of gold, in the
Couteau
or
Thompson's River District, we have had much communication with
persons, who have since visited that part of the country.
2. The search for gold and "prospecting" of the country, had up
to the last dates from the interior
been
been carried on almost exclusively by
the native Indian population,
who have discovered the productive beds, and put out almost all the gold,
about eight hundred ounces, which has been hitherto exported from the
country; and who are moreover extremely jealous of the whites
and strongly opposed to their digging the soil for gold.
3. The few white men who passed the winter at the diggings,
chiefly retired Servants of the Hudson's Bay Company, though
well acquainted with Indian character, were obstructed by the
natives, in all their attempts to search for gold. They were on
all occasions narrowly watched and in every instance, when they
did succeed in removing the surface and
excavating
excavating to the depth
of the auriferous stratum, they were quietly hustled and crowded
by the natives, who having, by that means, obtained possession
of the spot, then proceeded to reap the fruits of their labors.
4. Such conduct was
unwarrantable
This term might be demurred to; for the natives, whose
country we choose to take possession of, have a good
right to dig for gold; & I suppose it will be difficult to make
them understand the right of the Crown to minerals in a
Country which they regard as their own.
ABd.
and exceedingly trying to the temper of spirited men, but the savages
were far too numerous for resistance, and they had to submit to their
dictation. It is however worthy of remark and a circumstance highly
honorable to the character of those savages that they have on all
occasions scrupulously respected the persons and property of their
white visitors, at the same time that they have expressed a
determination to reserve the gold for their own benefit.
5. Such
5. Such being the purpose of the Natives; affrays and collisions
with the whites will surely follow the accession of numbers, which the
latter are now receiving by the influx of adventurers from
Vancouver's
Island and the United States Territories in
Oregon, and there is no doubt
in my mind that sooner or later the intervention of Her Majesty's
Government will be required to restore and maintain the peace; up to the
present time however, the country continues quiet; but simply I believe
because the whites have not attempted to resist the impositions of the
natives. I will however make it a part of my duty to keep you well
informed in respect to the state of the gold country.
6. The extent of the gold
region
region is yet but imperfectly known,
and I have therefore not arrived at any decided opinion as to its
ultimate value as a gold producing country. The boundaries of the gold
district have been however greatly extended since my former report.
7. In addition to the diggings before known on
Thompson's River
and its tributary streams, a valuable deposit has been recently found by
the natives on a bank of
Fraser's River about 5 miles beyond its
confluence with the
Thompson, and gold in small quantities has been found
in the possession of the natives as far as the
Great Falls of
Fraser's
River,
about eighty miles above
the Forks. The small quantity of gold hitherto
produced
about
about eight hundred ounces by the large native population of
the country is however unaccountable in a rich gold producing country,
unless we assume that the want of skill, industry, and proper mining
tools, on the part of the natives, sufficiently account for the fact.
8. On the contrary the vein rocks and its other geological
features as described by an experienced gold miner encourage the
belief that the country is highly auriferous.
9. The Miner in question clearly described the older slate
formations thrown up and pierced by beds of quartz, granite,
porphery,
and other igneous rocks; the vast accumulations of sand, gravel and
shingle, extending from
the
the roots of the mountains to the banks of
Fraser's River and its affluents; which are peculiar characteristics of
the gold districts of California and other countries. We therefore hope
and are preparing for a rich harvest of trade which will greatly redound
to the advantage of this Colony.
10. I have further to communicate for your information that the
Proclamation
issued by me asserting the rights of the Crown to all gold in its natural
place of deposit, and forbidding all persons to dig for gold without a
licence have been published in the Newspapers of
Oregon and
Washington
Territories, and that notwithstanding some seventy or eighty adventurers
from
from the American side have gone by the way of
Fraser's River to the
Couteau mines, without taking out Licences.
11. I did not, as I might have done, attempt to enforce those
rights by means of a detachment of Seamen and Marines, from the
"
Satellite",
without being assured that such a proceeding would meet with the approval
of Her Majesty's Government; but the moment your instructions on the
subject are received, I will take measures to carry them into effect.
12. There being only two practicable routes, from the sea coast to
the
Couteau Mines; those could be guarded
at at little expense, and the
country rendered as secure from foreign intrusion, as the fabled garden
of the Hesperides.
[P.S.] An explanatory sketch of
Frasers River is forwarded with
this
Report.
J.D.
Minutes by CO staff
Mr Merivale
This will be useful for reference in case more enquiries are
asked of this Office on the subject.
Fortunately the Boundary Surveying Ships are at
Victoria, which can
render assistance to the Europeans in case of conflict with the Natives.
Copy to F.O. H. Bay Co R. Geol:
Society.
Lord Carnarvon
Difficulties arising out of such circumstances as these grow so rapidly,
that I really think the attention of
Govt ought at once to be called
to the subject.
The Governor asks for instructions, & requires them. He was told to
issue a proclamation requiring gold licenses to be taken out, which was
done. This proclamation is disregarded, as was of course to be expected
when the excitement increased, there being no force on the spot & no
semblance of British Government. I suppose that on the whole the best
direction will be, to let things take their course as regards the
licenses & the gold digging, but to prevent, if he can, & if he cannot,
immediately report upon, any proceedings inconsistent with the assertion
of British dominion in the territory? In the mean time you are aware of
the difficulty which prevents his being armed with a Lieut. Governor's
Commission.
This describes a dangerous state of things,
wh it is clear cannot
long last. The next
mail leaves on the
16th and it ought to take out
instructions to the
Govr but those instructions must depend upon the
course
wh is adopted with reference to the Law
opinion
wh passed me yesterday.
I must leave this to
Mr Merivale's judgment, being unable to
deal with it now, and an early answer being required. The most
essential part is to see if the Lieut. Gov's Commission cannot
be granted, the present legal obstacles notwithstanding.
L
d Carnarvon
I pass this again to draw attention to the passage at the end, which
has acquired more importance than I at first attached to it. It
certainly looks on the whole like a plan for keeping the gold for the
HB Co's people as far as possible.
I am afraid so. See min. on 5869.
People in this document
Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
Cairns, Hugh MacCalmont
Carnarvon, Earl
Douglas, Sir James
Kelly, Sir Fitzroy Edward
Labouchere, Henry
Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
Merivale, Herman
Prevost, Captain James Charles
Stanley, Lord Edward Henry
Vessels in this document
HMS Plumper, 1848-1865
HMS Satellite, 1855-1879
Places in this document
British Columbia
Couteau River
Esquimalt
Fraser River
Great Falls
Lillooet
London
Lytton
Oregon Territory, or Columbia District
Thompson Region
Thompson River
Vancouver Island
Victoria
Washington Territory
Williams Lake