b. 1825-07-13
d. 1897
Obtaining his army commission in 1843, Henry Maynard Ball spent a decade with his regiment in Australia, which included
commanding a detachment in the gold fields.1
As a retired army captain, he arrived in
Victoria in
May 1859 with a letter of introduction from Secretary of State
Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton. In June,
Douglas appointed him assistant gold commissioner and stipendiary magistrate for the district
of
Lytton.
2
Four years later,
Douglas described him as
a shrewd careful magistrate, extremely methodical and correct in all his official
transactions.
3 He served in a similar capacity in the
Kootenays and
Quesnel.
4 In
1867 he was appointed a member of the
BC Legislative Council for
Cariboo West.
5 He retired in
1881 and spent the rest of his life in
San Francisco.
6
- 1. A. Watts, The Country Court of British Columbia, Advocate 27 (1969): 76-77.
- 2. Enclosure in Douglas to Newcastle, 18 February 1863, 3746, CO 60/15, p. 142.
- 3. Ibid.
- 4. . Watts, The Country Court of British Columbia, Advocate 27 (1969): 76-77.
- 5. G. P. V. Akrigg and Helen B. Akrigg, British Columbia Cronicle, 1847-1871: Gold & Colonists (Vancouver, B.C. : Discovery Press, 1977) p. 341.
- 6. . Watts, The Country Court of British Columbia, Advocate 27 (1969): 76-77.