15 Vallatort Villas Stoke, 
                  Devonport
                  
               31st August 1858
               
               Sir,
                
            
            
               Your letter of the 
17th inst: relative to the information I
               volunteered respecting 
Vancouvers Island should have had earlier
               attention had not illness prevented it.
               
               When I first visited 
Vancouvers Island in HMS 
Pandora in 
1846 &
               
8 it was not Colonised, the only Inhabitants except Indians
               being about Thirty all of whom were Servants of the Hudson Bay
               Company; the Indians were then very numerous and in some parts
               hostile.  On returning again in 
1857 in HMS 
Plumper I found a
               few Farms had been established in the Neighbourhood of 
Esquimalt
               Harbour by the Puget Sound Agricultural Company and taking an
               interest in, and having some knowledge of agriculture, I took
               an early opportunity of examining the

 
               progress made, and the
               nature and quality of the Soil and the best Crops likely to be
               obtained from it.  In the first place the Farms I found were not
               under the direction of practical Men and with one exception but
               little had been done.  The exception I allude to is a Farm of
               about 600 Acres under the direction of a 
Mr Langford who had
               200 acres under the plough in a very good working condition, and
               his Crop of Wheat looked extremely well.  Barley and Oats were
               not above the earth but I was informed that they both produced
               good Crops, the average per acre being Wheat 30 Bushels, Barley
               30, Oats 35 and in nearly all places the Potatoe thrives very
               well.  In walking over these Farms in the Autumn what
               particularly attracted my attention was the almost total
               absence of green Crops, such as Turnips, Cabbage, Carrots &c
               for winter meat for their Cattle, and altho the Farms have been
               established some 5 years, not a grass seed had been sown,
               therefore they had nothing to depend on for out door food
               should the Winter prove severe.  The Winter passed to the middle
               of 
February 1858 very mild, when a sudden change took place and
               the Thermometer fell to plus 5 or

 
               27 degrees below the freezing
               point.  This lasted a week, and I heard many of the Farmers say
               that had it continued another week they would scarcely have
               had a head of Cattle remaining out of a herd of several hundred
               bullocks and Sheep.  Such a state of things in such a beautiful
               Country I think highly reprehensible and only requires a few
               practical energetic Farmers to establish themselves to show
               forth to the Western World the Capabilities of one of the finest
               and most fertile Islands in the Globe.  I must here remark that
               in the Months of Janry February and March the Sheep get so
               poor as to be almost unfit for food and the Bullocks have been
               refused by the Men of the Ships of War.
               
               The Soil is principally composed of a black Vegetable Mould of
               from a foot to 18 inches in depth and covering a hard clay.  In
               other places it is light and Sandy of a cream color not above a
               foot deep and covering Limestone which is abundant and produces
               very good lime either for building or manure.
               
            
            
               The Island so far as is at present Known is in most parts much
               wooded but in the 
Cowitchin Valley about 70 miles above
               
Victoria, there are

 
               many thousand acres almost without a Tree or
               a Shrub, here the Farmer could put his plough into the ground
               at once.  It may not be out of place to here quote the remark of
               the American Commissioner (
Mr Campbell) who visited 
Cowitchin
               in HMS 
Satellite in 
1857, viz that it was worth the whole of
               
Washington Territory.  I do not anticipate that 
Vancouvers
                  Island will ever become a great agricultural Country or grow
               much more than the requirements for its Population, on account
               of its being so much wooded, but it produces the finest Timber
               in the world, and on its being opened up will doubtless be found
               rich in Iron, Copper, Tin, Potters Clay, Coal and probably Gold.
               
               The Sea face of 
the Island is at present little known but I
               have reason to believe that on its being Surveyed we shall find
               it contains some very fine harbours accessible at all times to
               Sailing Vessels, in which case it would save the tedious passage
               to 
Esquimalt which is about 60 miles up the 
Straits of Fuca.
               
               The Climate altho 
the Island is situated in the same Latitude as
               England does not resemble it, in the Winter months or from
               December to March scarcely a day passes 
without
 
               without heavy showers,
               or continuous rain, and after April little or no rain falls, the
               Temperature is also higher in the Summer, and during the Months
               of June and July thick fogs are prevalent lasting in some
               instances for three weeks, and obscuring everything.
               
               The 
Island of San Juan, or 
Belle View is about 15 miles from
               
Victoria altho only about 5 from the nearest point of
               
Vancouvers, the land here is very similar to 
Vancouvers only not
               so thickly wooded, the Puget Sound Agricultural Company have a
               large Farm there under cultivation, and the Americans have
               placed there an officer of the Customs who acts in his Capacity
               on all Vessels calling, even the things landed by the H.B.C's
               Vessels for the use of their Servants undergo his scrutiny.  This
               Island I consider is of vast importance to us from its near
               proximity to 
Vancouvers and would no doubt if ours save us many
               a trouble with our lawless neighbours, and I cannot see what it
               could ever benefit them, except as a near retreat for any act
               committed against the laws established at 
Vancouver.
               
 
 
            
            
               In conclusion I beg to state that I shall at all times be most
               happy to answer any questions that may arise relative to
               
Vancouvers or vicinity.
               
               And have the honor to be Sir
               
               your obed
T Servant
               
W. Elliott
               
               Paymaster R.N.
               
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     Yes.  The letter is moreover worth reading.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     His information as regards the climate is worth noting, though
                     thick fogs for three weeks continuously during June & July seem
                     strange.  As regards grass seeds &c I do not see why a small
                     stock c
d not

 
                     be sent out to 
Govr Douglas in the freight ship.
                     The bulk of such articles 
wd be very small & they might be very
                     useful.
                     
                     
                     
                        
                           
                           Lord C.  This has been provided for.  We have allowed 5  for Seeds.
                           
 
                        
                      
                     
                     
                     It seems from this account that S. Juan—the key to the islands
                     wh connect V. Couvers I. with the Mainland—is already
                     appreciated by the Americans who have established an officer
                     there.  I thought that it was temporarily at all events in our hands?
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     Send an Extract from this letter to 
Lord Malmesbury.  I mean
                     that which states the Americans have established a Customs House
                     at 
St Juan.  Enquire whether Lord M. thinks they have that
                     right.
                     
                        
                           Look to past correspce on this point 
                        
                       State that some of these islands
                     
                     
                     claimed by the Americans
                     in the Channel are stated to have good harbours & that it is of
                     the utmost importance

 
                     in a military & maritime point of view—to
                     obtain if possible from the Americans the cession of these
                     islands & not to relinquish 
St Juan especially if it can be avoided.
                     
 
                
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft, Colonial Office to 
Elliott, 
22 September 1858, thanking
                     him for his communication.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     Draft, Colonial Office to 
E. Hammond, Foreign Office
                     
25 September 1858, forwarding
                     extract of the letter for their information and stressing the
                     importance of the islands off 
Vancouver Island.
                     
 
            
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Campbell, Archibald
                  
                        Carnarvon, Earl
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Elliott,  W.
                  
                        Hammond, Edmund
                  Langford, Edward Edwards
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Malmesbury, Earl
                  Mayne, Lieutenant Richard Charles
                  Merivale, Herman
                
               
                  Vessels in this document
                  HMS Pandora, 1833-1862
                  HMS Plumper, 1848-1865
                  HMS Satellite, 1855-1879
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  Cowichan Region
                  Esquimalt
                  Juan de Fuca Strait
                  London
                  San Juan Island
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria
                  Washington Territory