Saltspring Island
Scott notes that the Saanich First Nations called the island “Cuan”, which means
each end,
and the Quw’ utsun’ called the island “Klaathem”, which means
salt.
1 The Quw’ utsun’ also named a mountain on the south of the island “Chuan”, or
facing the sea,
which is the name
Douglas applied to the entire island on a map from 1854.
2
Pemberton’s 1855 map names the island Saltspring Island, an epithet coined by HBC officials
in reference to the island’s salt-water springs.
3 In 1859,
Richards changed the name to “Admiral Island”, marked so on this map, after Rear Admiral
Baynes; however, in 1905 the Geographic Board of Canada reverted the name back to Saltspring
Island, as local parlance decreed.
4
One of the Island’s memorable early inhabitants was a deranged, gun-toting surveyor
named Rowe, who built himself a hut and declared himself the “Czar of Salt Spring
Island”. Rowe periodically posted absurd proclamations for his
loyal subjects
to follow.
5 “The Czar”, however, met an unfortunate end, as he was murdered by a small group
of people from the Quw’ utsun’ First Nation in October of 1861 while away from his
empire,
on the
Saanich Peninisula.
6
- 1. Andrew Scott, The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Placenames (Madeira Park, BC: Harbour Publishing, 2009), 520.
- 2. Ibid., 520-521.
- 3. Ibid., 521.
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. G. P. V. Akrigg and H. B. Akrigg, British Columbia Chronicle, 1847-1871 (Victoria: Discovery Press, 1977), 226.
- 6. Ibid., 227.