b. 1814
               		
               d. 1875
               		
               		
               
                   
                  
                     			Stamp was born in England in the year 1814. In 1851, he obtained his master's certificate.
                     He was involved in lumber trade that brought him to 
Puget Sound in 1857.
1 He was married to Maria Stamp, and they had a daughter and four sons.
2  
                  			
                  In 1859, Stamp volunteered to to be a man sent on a gun boat to 
Barclay Sound, in the role of a government superintendent of the settlement. He was not employed
                     by the Government so the cost of Stamp's 
entertainment
 aboard a naval vessel was debated.
3 
                  			
                  Stamp sent a proposal for a mail service from San Francisco to 
Vancouver Island in 1859.
4 Necessity of this service was recognized by 
George Hamilton.
5 In 1859, Stamp sent a letter to 
Carnarvon begging to be the contractor and he received an interview.
6 In the correspondence between 
Carnarvon and 
Douglas, Douglas says that Stamp is a great 
ship owner and master, and is generally considered to be a respectable and perfectly
                        trustworthy person.
7 Stamp did not get the position because the conversation was delayed when he went
                     to London.
8 
                  			
                  He did, however, get permission to build a lumber mill in 
Puget Sound or on 
Vancouver Island. By 1860, he had negotiated a location with 
Douglas and began building the mill in Alberni Inlet, Port Alberni. This mill had access
                     to 15,000 acres of timber as well as 2,000 acres for building a settlement and the
                     mill itself. It’s operations ceased in 1864 due to the timber in the area being too
                     large and Stamp’s principles not matching that of his work.
9 
                  			
                  After the mill shut down, Stamp began mining for copper along the inlet before turning
                     back to the lumber industry by the end of the year. In 1865, Stamp assisted in forming
                     the Vancouver Island Spar, Lumber, and Saw Mill Company on Burrard Inlet.10 Stamp stopped his work there in 1869, due to having different principles yet again.
                     Stamp was sued for $14,000 and sold the site which became Hastings Mill (the centre
                     of the soon-to-develop city of Vancouver).11 In 1871, Stamp discovered the fish curing industry and travelled to England to establish
                     a company to pack salmon. In 1875, while developing this promising endeavour, Stamp
                     died from a heart attack.12
                  		
                  
                     
                        - 1. W. Kaye Lamb, Stamp, Edward, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
 
                        - 2. Ibid.
 
                        - 3. Romaine to Under-Secretary of State, 18 March 1861, 2493, CO 305/18, p. 3; Douglas to Newcastle, 11 September 1861, No. 60, 9782, CO 305/17, p. 445; Romaine to Rogers (Permanent Under-Secretary), 22 November 1861, 10414, CO 305/18, p. 66.
 
                        - 4. Hamilton to Merivale (Permanent Under-Secretary), 19 March 1859, 2884, CO 305/13, p. 3; Corry to Under-Secretary of State, 21 February 1859, 2062, CO 305/12, p. 9; Stamp to Carnarvon (Parliamentary Under-Secretary), 2 February 1859, 1163, CO 305/13, p. 285.
 
                        - 5. Hamilton to Merivale (Permanent Under-Secretary), 31 May 1859, 5533, CO 60/6, p. 159.
 
                        - 6. Corry to Under-Secretary of State, 21 February 1859, 2062, CO 305/12, p. 9.
 
                        - 7. Douglas to Lytton, 7 December 1858, No. 48, 1069/59, CO 305/9, p. 241.
 
                        - 8. W. Kaye Lamb, Stamp, Edward, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
 
                        - 9. Ibid.
 
                        - 10. Ibid.
 
                        - 11. Ibid.
 
                        - 12. Ibid.