Giuseppe Vignolo (spelt also Vignola in the despatches) was a Jewish Merchant of Italian
origins, emigrating from
San Fransisco, California, to
Victoria in
1858.
1 It is likely that he arrived in
Victoria with the intent to acquire land
ahead of the gold rush boom which [Vignolo and others] had precipitated.
2
It is likely that Vignolo was the owner of G. Vignolo & Co., a grocery store located
on Wharf Street.
3 In
1862, Vignolo and other merchants in
Victoria sent a letter to Wells, Fargo, & Co., expressing their need for a secure assay office,
which they believed the firm could provide in the wake of
extensive embezzlement and fraud,
reported by the
Daily British Colonist,
April 7, 1862.
4
In
1864, an Italian Minister inquired into Vignolo’s whereabouts, but neither
G. Vignolo
nor a
Vignola
was not located in
Victoria.
5 One scholar suggests the possibility that Vignolo may have travelled with
Victoria speculators
along the
Bentinck Arm Corridor to
Bella Coola.
6 His fate is unknown.