b. 1838-04-30
               
               d. 1893-02-10
               		
               		
               	
               
                  Lieutenant Henry Spencer Palmer was an engineer who undertook multiple surveys in
                     the province under the auspices of the Royal Engineers as part of the British Columbia
                     Expedition from its beginning in 
1858 until it was disbanded in 
1863.
1 James Douglas described Palmer favourably to the Colonial Secretary, 
the Duke of Newcastle: 
Lieutenant Palmer has been the Subaltern of the Detachment, but upon one or two occasions
                        has conducted exploring trips though the Colony with great credit to himself, and
                        has done good service in fixing points and distances in the Upper Country.
2Born 30 April 1838 in Bangalore, India, Palmer attended private schools at Bath and was educated by
                     private tutors in Woolwich and Plumstead before being admitted to the Royal Military
                     Academy at Woolwich and, later, the School of Military Engineering at Chatham.3
                  		
                  		
                  Palmer received his colonial appointment 
10 September 1858 and sailed from Gravesend, England, aboard the Thames City, landing in 
Esquimalt 12 April 1859. Palmer worked under the command of 
Captain Robert Mann Parsons of the Royal Engineers.
4 His work in the province included reconnaissance of the 
Harrison and 
Lillooet route to the Upper 
Fraser River in 
1859, the creation of a sketch map of the province in 
1860 that was heavily distributed to the colonial establishment, a topographical report
                     on the 
Bentinck Arm and 
Caribou Districts in 
1863, and a survey from 
Victoria to 
Fort Alexander the same year.
5 Arthur Johnstone Blackwood, senior clerk of the Colonial Office, called Palmer 
an exceedingly clever young Officer, who, being on the spot & faute de mieux, might
                        make a good successor to Colonel Moody, in the Office of Chief Commr. of Lands.
6The detachment of engineers was disbanded in 1863. Palmer returned to England and joined the Ordnance Survey, analyzing areas throughout
                     England.7 In 1869, Palmer, with the financial backing of the Royal Society, undertook a survey of the
                     Sinai Peninsula. His work as a surveyor took him around the world to New Zealand,
                     Barbados, Hong Kong, and eventually Japan. He retired from the Royal Engineers in
                     1887 and established a civil practice in Yokohama, where he designed the harbour and waterworks
                     for the city. The emperor awarded Palmer with the third class of the order of the
                     Rising Sun for his service to the country.8 He died suddenly on 10 February 1893 while working on a project in Tokyo.9
                  		
                  		
                  In 
1862, while surveying the 
Cariboo gold fields, Palmer came into conflict with the 
Bella Coola Indians at 
North Bentinck Arm. According to an anecdote from his wife that was reported in the Daily Colonist,
                     Palmer was cooking salmon over a fire when a party of armed Indians arrived. They
                     took issue with him for cutting the backbone of the salmon and were ready to put him
                     to death for the offence. Palmer managed to cleverly talk his way out of it and save
                     his men’s lives.
10 
                     	
                     - 1. Elizabeth Baigent, Palmer, Henry Spencer, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- 2. Newcastle to Douglas, 3 August 1863, CO 398/2, p. 169.
- 3. Elizabeth Baigent, Palmer, Henry Spencer, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- 4. Hawes to Merrivale, 30 July 1859, 7599, CO 60/6, p. 302.; Jiro Higuchi Lieutenant Henry Spencer Palmer, Royal Engineers Website.
- 5. Douglas to Lytton, 18 August 1859, 10048, CO 60/5, p. 44; Hawes to Under-Secretary for the Colonies, 21 February 1860, 1791, CO 60/9, p. 265; Douglas to Newcastle, 21 May 1863, 6928, CO 60/15, p. 316; Newcastle to Douglas, 3 August 1863, 6928, NAC, RG7, G8C/10, p. 555.
- 6. Douglas to Newcastle, 21 May 1863, 6928, CO 60/15, p. 316.
- 7. Elizabeth Baigent, Palmer, Henry Spencer, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- 8. Frances M. Woodward, Palmer, Henry Spencer, Dictionary of Canadian Biography; Ibid.
- 9. Elizabeth Baigent, Palmer, Henry Spencer, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- 10. Mrs. Mary Spencer Palmer, The Daily Colonist (1934-01-11); William Barr, Palmer with Indians in His Pocket, Royal Engineers Website.