The Stikine Territory today would cover present-day northwest
British Columbia in the south, the
Yukon to the north, and its top-most right portion would push into the Northwest Territories.
Its official boundaries were as follows: the Alaska border to the west, the 62nd parallel
to the north, the 125th meridian to the east, and the border of the colony of
British Columbia to the south.
1
This territory existed for a short time as a discrete political region, mostly due
to gold discoveries on the
Stikine River in 1861.
2 Eventually, the British government gave
Douglas legal authority in the region,
3 and the despatches collection tracks the fate of this short-lived entity up to the
point, in 1863, when
Newcastle includes the following passage in a memorial [
in this document]: