No. 6
               
            
            
               19 February 1859
               
            
            
               I have the honor to communicate for your information
               circumstances which have lately come to my knowledge respecting
               the proceedings of certain American Citizens in regard to the
               Island 
of
of 
San Juan, part of the disputed Territory in the
               
Archipelago de Arro.
               
               2.  As the question of Sovereignty was not until lately
               discussed, I have always treated that Island as a dependency of
               
Vancouver's Island, and a part of the British Dominions,
               according to the instructions contained in 
Secretary Sir George
                  Grey's Despatch N
o 4 of the 
21st September 1854, a copy of
               which is herewith enclosed for ready reference.  I moreover
               appointed 
John Charles Griffin, Esquire, Justice of the Peace
               for that District, with authority to 
Keep
Keep the Peace, and to
               punish offences within the jurisdiction of that office.
               
               The Hudson's Bay Company also formed an extensive stock farm on
               the same Island, and which they still maintain.
               
            
            
               4.  Our occupation of the Island has therefore been general and
               complete, as well as undisturbed by Citizens of the United
               States.
               
            
            
               5.  A number of American Citizens have, however, lately employed
               a person to make Surveys, and to plot out certain parts of 
San
                  Juan Island, (including the portions of the lands enclosed and
               cultivated 
by
by the Servants of the Hudson's Bay Company,) for the
               purpose of settlement, and there is no doubt that the whole
               Island will soon be occupied by a squatter population of
               American Citizens, if they do not receive an immediate check.
               
               6.  This movement has, I have no doubt, been commenced by some
               designing person exciting and working upon the minds of ignorant
               masses, with the view of hastening the settlement of the
               Boundary question, and fortifying the claims of the United
               States Government.
               
            
            
               7.  The course is one full 
of
of danger, and I fear that Her
               Majesty's Government would not approve of my adopting measures
               for the summary and forcible ejection of squatters, while the
               question of sovereignty remains avowedly in dispute; at the same
               time circumstances may call for decisive action.
               
               8.  I have no hopes of inducing the Governor of 
Washington
                  Territory to take joint measures with me to prevent any
               occupation of 
San Juan and the other Islands of the 
Arro
                  Archipelago, pending the question of sovereignty.
               
               I
9.  I would recommend in the juncture an arrangement being
               entered into, having for its object the preservation of peace,
               and embodying as a condition of primary importance, that Great
               Britain and the United States will unite in preventing the
               settlement of the Islands in question, by ejecting squatters,
               until the line of Boundary is definitively traced and it is
               decided to which Power they of right belong.
               
 
            
            
               10.  Such an understanding between the two Countries will
               prevent much future evil; but whether such a measure may be
               adopted or not, 
I
I trust I may be favored with immediate
               instructions for my guidance in respect to any proceedings which
               it may be desired I should take for the preservation of the
               rights of the British Crown.
               
               I have etc.
               
               
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                     Mr Merivale
                     It would be very desirable to send this report to the Foreign
                     Office at an early period so as to enable us to ans
r the
                     Governor by the Mail of the 
16th inst.  The proposal he submits
                     seems to me, at least, prudent & advisable.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
            
            
               Other documents included in the file
               
                
                  
                  
                     Draft,
                     Colonial Office to 
E. Hammond, Foreign Office, 
11 April 1859,
                     forwarding copy of the despatch, with explanation, for their
                     immediate attention.
                     
 
            
            
               
                  People in this document
                  
                        Blackwood, Arthur Johnstone
                  
                        Carnarvon, Earl
                  
                        Cass, Lewis
                  
                        Douglas, Sir James
                  
                        Grey, Third Earl,  Henry George 
                  
                        Griffin,  Charles John
                        
                  
                        Hammond, Edmund
                  Lytton, Sir Edward George Earle Bulwer
                  Merivale, Herman
                
               
                  Places in this document
                  San Juan Island
                  San Juan Islands
                  Vancouver Island
                  Washington City
                  Washington Territory