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.
1This 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]: