b. 1813
d. 1887
Archibald Campbell was born in Albany, New York in 1813.1 Campbell graduated from West Point Military Academy in 1835.2 By 1837, Campbell left the Military for a civil engineering position.3 However, he permanently left the private sector in 1845 to start a thirty-one-year
career in the United States Government.4
On 14 February 1857, President Franklin Pearce appointed Campbell to lead a Commission,
along with Lieutenant John G. Parke, to survey the 49th Parallel Boundary with Great
Britain in the Pacific Northwest.
5 The United States boundary with Great Britain had been defined by the terms of the
Oregon Treaty of 15 June 1846; however, disputes about the water boundary east of
Vancouver Island was not clearly defined.
6
Campbell’s commission arrived in
Semiahmoo Bay in June 1857 and organized their base camp in the area.
7 Campbell met with his British counterpart, Captain
James C. Prevost, on 27 June 1857.
8 The commissioners could not agree on a boundary between
Vancouver Island and the mainland.
9 Work was halted as the issue eventually turned to conflict.
The water boundary issue resulted in what is now known as the “Pig War.”
10 The contested area was the
San Juan Islands; as both sides believed the
islands were under their jurisdiction.
11 The
islands remained neutral territory, with both Americans and British settling the area.
12 However, on 15 June 1859, an American shot and killed a pig belonging to the Hudson’s
Bay Company,
13 Tensions escalated when the American military landed on
San Juan and the British officials responded by sending the Royal Navy.
14 The issue would not be resolved until 1872, when peace talks concluded under the
arbitration of Kaiser Wilhelm I of Germany.
15 The war was bloodless and without military engagement.
16
As the water boundary issue escalated, Campbell began work on the land boundary. The
American Commission worked independently from 1857 until the arrival of the British
Commission under Colonel
John S. Hawkins in June of 1858.
17 The first meeting at
Semiahmoo Bay resulted in disagreement.
18 The teams worked mostly independently from 1858 to 1859.
19 The Commissioners met again in 1859, but Campbell refused to sign the minutes of
the meeting as he felt his points had not been fairly adopted.
20 Authorities reprimanded Campbell and told him to come to some sort of agreement.
21 The Commissioners had their third and final meeting in 1860 at Harney Depot,
Washington.
22 The meeting was more amiable and productive.
23 The Americans continued their survey eastward until 1861, concluding after five years
of work and the British Commission would leave the following year.
24
Correspondence shows that the commissioners respected their counterparts, with the
exception of Campbell.
25 For example,
Hawkins would later describe Campbell as
impossible.
26 And on 1 August 1859,
Prevost wrote
James Douglas commenting on Campbell’s conduct stating,
Upon arrival there [Semiahoo Bay] I found that Mr. Campbell had been absent for about a fort-night… Mr. Campbell was
then in the ‘Shubrick’, professedly on a deer shooting excursion.
27 Nonetheless, Campbell would serve again as US Commissioner surveying the
Rocky Mountains to the easternmost point of
Lake of the Woods from 1872 to 1874.
28 Campbell died in Washington D.C. on 27 July 1887.
- 1. DeMeyer, Denny. Campbell versus Hawkins: The Sometimes Stormy Relationship between American and British
Commissioners to the 1857-1862 Northwest Boundary Survey. Land Surveyors' Association of Washington Historical Society.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Ibid.
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. Henry William Seward, The Northwest Boundary: Discussion of the Water Boundary Question: Geographical Memoir
of the Islands in Dispute and History of the Military Occupation of San Juan Island. (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1868), 95.
- 6. Denny DeMeyer, Campbell versus Hawkins: The Sometimes Stormy Relationship between American and British
Commissioners to the 1857-1862 Northwest Boundary Survey. Land Surveyors' Association of Washington Historical Society.
- 7. United States Canada Peace Arch Anniversary Association. Boundary Survey 1857-62.
- 8. Ibid.
- 9. Ibid.
- 10. Mike Vouri, The Pig War - San Juan Island. National Historical Park Service of Washington.
- 11. Ibid.
- 12. Ibid.
- 13. Ibid.
- 14. Ibid.
- 15. Ibid.
- 16. Ibid.
- 17. DeMeyer, Campbell versus Hawkins: The Sometimes Stormy Relationship between American and British
Commissioners to the 1857-1862 Northwest Boundary Survey. Land Surveyors' Association of Washington Historical Society.
- 18. Ibid.
- 19. Ibid.
- 20. Ibid.
- 21. Ibid.
- 22. Ibid.
- 23. Ibid.
- 24. Ibid.
- 25. Ibid.
- 26. Ibid.
- 27. Britsh Government.Correspondence Relative to the Occupation of the Island of San Juan by the United
States' Troops. August to October, 1859. (London: The Foreign Office, 1859), 32-33.
- 28. DeMeyer, Campbell versus Hawkins: The Sometimes Stormy Relationship between American and British
Commissioners to the 1857-1862 Northwest Boundary Survey. Land Surveyors' Association of Washington Historical Society.