b. 1817-10-19
               
               d. 1894-06-05
               
               
               
                  Richard Blanshard was born 
19 October 1817, in 
London. He schooled at Cambridge, then, briefly, practiced law until duty called him to
                     serve in the Sikh War of 
1848-49, after which he was decorated for bravery, a quality required, apparently, for his
                     most famous assignment, that of first governor of 
Vancouver Island.
Blanshard's appointment was tethered on all sides to burdens, from the pragmatic to
                     the personal. He accepted the position without pay, in lieu of which he expected to
                     receive one thousand acres of colony land. Blanshard set off for his new post not
                     on an HBC supply ship, but rather, a mail ship—
Pelly, a relative of Blanshard, reports this to 
Grey in 
this despatch. As a result of ill-timed transfers, Blanshard was, more or less, marooned in 
Panama until he made his way to the 
Driver, a ship that would sail him to 
Vancouver Island.
He arrived at 
Fort Victoria on March 11th, following a freak snow storm. 
Douglas, then chief factor for the HBC, had neither resources or labour to construct Blanshard's
                     appointed accommodations of a proper government house. Blanshard lived aboard the
                     
Driver until he was relocated, rather inauspiciously, to an empty storehouse in the fort.
                     Politically, things were worse. Blanshard was handed a conundrum: to assemble some
                     form of government from non-HBC men in a colony made up exclusively of the same.
Blanshard spent seven days in an open canoe—in November—from 
Fort Rupert to 
Fort Victoria after settling, rather clumsily and brutally, the murder case at 
Fort Rupert. Thereafter, he suffered what he describes as 
continual attacks of ague and subsequent relapses.
Blanshard 
resigned and asked to leave the colony, but it took nine months for him to receive confirmation of his resignation. All
                     the while, he was plagued by the blatant inequities of the HBC: they were rapacious
                     for land, price-gouging the Indigenous populations, and, as far as Blanshard was concerned,
                     doing everything possibly to deter colonial settlement. However, on 
30 August 1851, two days before his departure on the 
Daphne, Blanshard 
appointed a provisional council consisting of 
Douglas, 
Tod, and 
Cooper, men all inextricably linked to the HBC.
Blanshard lost his luggage in a shipwreck on the way home, and, when he finally arrived
                     in 
London, he learned that he had to pay £300 for his return passage—roughly $52,000 in current
                     Canadian dollars. 
This despatch summarizes much of Blanshard's history and travails.
                     
                        - 1. James E. Hendrickson, Blanshard, Richard, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.