James D. Churchill served as
Alfred Waddington’s attorney during the disputes surrounding the construction of a road between mining
facilities near the mouth of the
Quesnel River and the
Bute Inlet that resulted in the “Chilcotin War” of
1864.
1
After the incident,
Waddington quickly ran out of funds to complete the project and ultimately abandoned it.
5 The despatches outline the communications between Churchill and
Seymour’s representatives as
Waddington tried in vain to raise the funds necessary to save the project.
- 1. Churchill to Cardwell, 20 September 1865, National Archives of the UK, 9137, CO 60/23, p.253.
- 2. W. Kaye Lamb,
Waddington, Alfred Penderell, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 3. W. Kaye Lamb,
Waddington, Alfred Penderell, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 4. W. Kaye Lamb,
Waddington, Alfred Penderell, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 5. W. Kaye Lamb,
Waddington, Alfred Penderell, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.