b. 1816-07-25
               
               d. 1882-01-03
               
               
               
                  
                  Alexander Grant Dallas was born 
25 July 1816 in Berbice, 
British Guiana. After his birth, his family then returned to Scotland during Dallas’s childhood.
                     As an adult, Dallas flourished within the financial circles of Liverpool and 
London. He had a successful career with Jardine, Matheson and Company and worked for their
                     offices in China. An illness forced Dallas to return to Britain, where he joined the
                     Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) in 
1856. The HBC feared for the stability of their subsidiary, Puget Sound Agricultural Company,
                     and sent Dallas to 
Victoria in 
1857 to investigate. After the 
Fraser River gold rush began, Dallas extended his trip due to worries over HBC interests on 
Vancouver Island.
1 
                  
                  
                  Dallas quickly clashed with 
James Douglas, who juggled loyalties between the colonies and the HBC. Dallas primarily concerned
                     himself with company interests and their animosity towards one another became well-known.
                     In 
1859, after 
Douglas became governor of 
British Columbia, the HBC instructed 
Douglas to transfer authority of the Western Department to Dallas. Despite their ill-will
                     towards one another, Dallas married 
Douglas’s daughter Jane shortly after arriving in 
Victoria.
2 
                  
                  
                  Dallas became known for his 
sharp practice[s]
 and was often involved in land disputes between the Crown and the HBC.
3 In 
1859, Dallas argued for company claim over extensive land in 
British Columbia, which sparked a two year negotiation. In 
1861, Dallas attempted to sell the last waterfront land in the 
Victoria’s business area, despite 
Douglas’s desire to build government offices in that space. Dallas also sold a plot of land
                     to 
Leopold Lowenberg in 
1861. Questions around the legitimacy of this sale resulted in fours years of debate.
 
                  
                  
                  After representing HBC interests at negotiations in 
London, Dallas returned to Canada in 
1862, freshly promoted to governor-in-chief of 
Rupert’s Land. In 
1864, Dallas retired to Scotland. He served the HBC as an adviser until 
1866.
4 His final acts in the Crown-company land dispute issue came in 
1864, when a surveyor general of the colony took the HBC to court over land claims, and
                     in 
1865, when Dallas defended himself and 
Mr. Finlayson from accusations of a public park infringement in 
1862.
 
                  
                  
                  In later years, Dallas co-founded the 
London Committee for Watching the Affairs of 
British Columbia with 
Donald Fraser and Gilbert Malcolm Sproat. The group unsuccessfully tried to prevent the absorption
                     of 
Vancouver Island into 
British Columbia.
5 Dallas also published 
San Juan, Alaska, and the North-West Boundary in 
1873, where he tried to defend the surrender of 
San Juan to the United States after the 
San Juan Island Dispute. In 
1859, amid arguments between British settlers and Americans over ownership of the island,
                     an American settler shot a HBC pig. During this so-called “Pig War”, officials in
                     
Victoria apparently threatened to jail the American (Dallas denied these allegations), which
                     prompted American military forces to land on the island.
6 In his book, Dallas felt he needed to provide his version of events.
7 Nine years later, in 
1882, Dallas died in 
London.
8 
                  
                  
                  
                     
                        - 1. W. Kayle Lamb, Dallas, Alexander Grant, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.
 
                        - 2. Ibid.
 
                        - 3. Douglas to Newcastle, 24 October 1861, 10953, CO 305/17, p. 479.
 
                        - 4. W. Kayle Lamb, Dallas, Alexander Grant, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.
 
                        - 5. Ibid.
 
                        - 6.  Gordon Lyall, The Pig and the Postwar Dream: The San Juan Island Dispute, 1853-1872, in History
                              and Memory, University of Victoria, 28-29.
 
                        - 7. A. G. Dallas, San Juan, Alaska, and the North-West Boundary, (London: Henry S. King and Co., 1873), 3.
 
                        - 8. W. Kayle Lamb, Dallas, Alexander Grant, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.