Lachine near Montreal, Canada East
                  
               
               18th. Augt. 1858.
               
               
               Sir,
                
            
            
            
            
            
            I see by the public journals that 
New Caledonia is created a separate Colony, and that in all probability, by this time, a Governor
               is appointed for it.  I have no wish to intrude or occupy your valuable time uselessly,
               yet I consider it my duty to lay before you, the following circumstance relative to
               the gold discoveries.  In the event of any unwillingness on the part of the Thompsons
               River Indians to permit whites to enter their country, the cause will be known to
               you and the Governor of the Colony, and thus, perhaps, negociations may be facilitated,
               which would otherwise be surrounded by insuperable difficulties.
In 
1854, when I was in 
Vancouvers Island, conversing with a friend about the Indians of 
New Caledonia, 
Fraser's & 
Thompson's Rivers, he told me of an earthquake that occurred in the region of the 
Thompson's River, and which was felt at 
Langley, on the 
embouchure
embouchure of the 
Fraser, and slightly at 
Vancouvers Island.  When residing at 
Kamloops, he had often noticed a mountain at a distance of about twenty five or thirty miles,
               which was volcanic and at intervals emitted smoke, in a greater or less degree.  He
               told me, in confidence, that his wife, who was of the tribe of Shooshwap Indians who
               inhabit that region, had been informed by some of her family, that the mountain had
               exploded and so terrified the Indians, that for nearly two years, they did not approach
               it.  At the end of that time, one braver than the rest of his tribe entered it, and
               discovered the extinct crater seamed with yellow metal, mixed up with much that was
               white.  On being shewn gold, he said it was like that, and his chief had told him,
               that that was what the white man came into the country south of them for.
The chief, a man of sagacity according to Indian notions, called his people together
               and addressed them.  He spoke of the Indians in California and 
Oregon, shewed them the evils that had beset the natives of those regions, and proved that
               their wars and gradual extinction, were caused by the white man's thirst for gold.
               He then drew a picture of their previous freedom and happiness, and ended by an appeal
               to their common sense, calling upon them to be silent on the subject of gold being
               in their country.  The appeal was not made in vain.  They jealously guarded all approaches
               to it, and were silent to all but their own kindred.  The Hudsons Bay Company had
               no knowledge of it, until in 
1856, I made the following proposition to them.  That my friend, whose secret it was,
               and who was unconnected with the Company, two other friends and I, should be permitted
               to work this quartz mine, the Company to furnish the capital, and the profits to be
               divided 5/10
ths to the Company, 1/10
th to each of us, & 1/10
th to promote 
the
the education and civilisation of the Shooshwap Indians.  The Company declined the
               proposition for two reasons: they had not a right to grant it, and even if they had
               would be afraid of being embroiled with Indians.  They did not doubt, by what I could
               understand, the existence of gold in very large quantities.
I made 
CaptPalliser acquainted with the locality of this mountain, and it would not astonish me to hear,
               he had crossed the 
Rocky Mountains, and endeavoured to discover it.  By a letter I received a few days since from 
Victoria, 
Vancouvers Island, I am informed that 
Mr Dallas, one of the directors of the Hudsons Bay Company, who belongs or did belong to the
               firm of Matheson & Co. in 
London, and who has lately married a daughter of 
Governor Douglas of 
Vancouvers Island, is gone into the interior, and probably with the same purpose of exploration, as
               he knows of my application to the Board, of which he was a member.
I am inclined to think a plan like the one I proposed to the Hudsons Bay Company would
               be better for the interests of the Indians, (if it be a veritable gold mine in a quartz
               matrix) than any other that can be adopted; as I know Indians are unable to bring
               an undertaking of this kind, to a successful issue.  Should this prove what I suppose
               it to be, a connecting link of the gold strata range from 
Queen Charlotte's Island to the Californian mountains, and it be granted away by the government on the principle
               I propose, I hope you are of opinion that my friends and myself are entitled to such
               grant, independent of any other than 
Capt Palliser, whom we should like to include as one of the grantees.
I trust you may have seen the necessity of my telling you all this, and altho' I may
               appear to have pled my own cause, believe me it has not been from any unworthy motive.
               Whatever the issue of this matter to my friends and myself 
may
may be, I am very thankful that I have given you the report of such a crater gold
               mountain being in existence, as if it prove a fact, such information may be the means
               of saving human blood.  This I hope will be considered an ample apology for addressing
               you.
I have the honor to be Sir with
 
               profound respect
               Your most obed
t humble
 
               Servant
               
John Miles
               Rt. Honble. Sir E. & B. Lytton; Bar
t, M.P.
               Her Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for the Colonies
               Colonial Office,
               
London
                
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
               
               
                
                  
                  Mr Merivale
                     Ack
e with thanks (through the Governor) & stating that H.M. 
Govt are precluded, on general grounds, from entertaining a proposal which would confer
                     on any Company, or private individual the exclusive right to work gold mines in 
B. Columbia.  Shew this to 
Coll Moody & send copy of the correspondence to the Governor.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Yes.  The story is a curious one, but I do not see what the writer's discovery is,
                     on his own observing, only something some Indians told him of.
                     
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                
                  
                  Sir Edward
                     This curious history calls to mind the stories of the golden peaked hills 
wh haunted the Spaniards during their earlier invasions of Mexico.  I suppose 
Mr Miles must be thanked & informed as suggested by 
Mr Blackwood?
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Yes—& if not a breach of confidence, I think both the 
govr & 
Col Moody may have copies of this letter.  My only doubt is whether that 
wd be fair to M
r M. I am not incredulous as to some truth in the story.
                     
 
                
            
            
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
               
Draft, Colonial Office to 
Douglas, 
25 October 1858, transmitting a copy of the letter and reply given, and suggesting 
Miles be given priority in working his claim.
                  
Draft, Colonial Office to 
Governor Sir E. Head, 
25 October 1858, requesting him to inform 
Miles that applications for working gold mines can only be made by the governor of the
                        colony, and that a copy of his letter has been forwarded to 
Governor Douglas.
                     Minutes by CO staff
                     
                     
Mr Blackwood
                           Should 
Mr Miles' letter be sent to 
Gov. Douglas?  He might under the gold regulations obtain a grant of the vein in question? & it
                           might not be fair to him to disclose its position until he has had an opportunity
                           of prosecuting the discovery himself.
 
                        
                        
                     
                        I think 
Mr. Miles' letter should, as 
Sir Edward proposes, be sent to 
Govr. 
Douglas, & that the 
govr be instructed to consider favorably 

any application which may be addressed to him by 
Mr Miles for a grant to work the ideal quartz-mine, subject of course to existing local regulations
                           & conditions.
                           And so write to the Governor sending him a copy of this correspondence.
 
                      
                   
               
               
               
               
               
               
                
            
            
            
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Carnarvon, Earl
                  
                        Dallas,  Alexander Grant
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Head, Sir Edmund Walker
                  Irving, Henry Turner
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Merivale, Herman
                  Miles, John
                  
                        Moody, Colonel Richard Clement
                  Palliser, Sir John
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  British Columbia
                  Fraser River
                  Haida Gwaii
                  Kamloops
                  Langley
                  London
                  New Caledonia
                  Oregon Territory, or Columbia District
                  The Rocky Mountains
                  Thompson River
                  Vancouver Island
                  Victoria