b. 1808-01-10
d. 1885
Isabella Ross, née Mainville, was born on
10 January 1808 to Joseph Mainville (a French engagé boatman) and Josette (an Ojibway woman); she
grew up in the Great Lakes Region. She is noted to have still been a
teen
when she married Charles Ross, a
Hudson's Bay fur trading clerk, in
1822. They were married at Lac La Pluie House in the area which is now
Ontario in a country marriage.
Two years after their marriage, the Rosses moved to the
HBC Fort Kilmaurs in the
New Caledonia District, what is now
British Columbia. They then moved to
Fort Vancouver where their marriage was
solemnized
by the Anglican Church in
1838. Ross had six boys and four girls, most of whom were born west of the Rockies, and
all of whom lived to adulthood. She and her family moved to
Victoria in the early 1840s where her husband lived only long enough to see the completion
of
Fort Victoria; he died in
1844.
After her husband's death, Ross and her children left
Victoria and went south to work at a farm near what is now
Tacoma, Washington. In
1852, after independently earning money, Ross had enough to return to
Victoria where she purchased 100 acres along Ross Bay -- known then as Ross Bay Farm. This land purchase enabled her to become the first woman and first Indigenous person
to be a registered landowner in
BC; and it also ensured that the name “Ross” would take its place beside other known
pioneers such as Douglas, McNeil, Tolmie, and others. In her remaining years, Ross
was cared for by her daughter
Flora Ross in a small house on the grounds of the convent of the
Sisters of St Anns. She died in
1885.
Ross, like other Indigenous women in the “founding families,” was subjected to racial
discrimination and acculturation. In colonial
Victoria, the husband's culture was dominant, therefore
the role of Indigenous mothers socializing their children was circumscribed,
as was the case for Ross when her husband sent their children to England for a “proper
education.” Furthermore, she faced her second husband, Lucius Simon O'Brien's abuse. A so-called
fortune hunter, whom she married in
1863, O'Brien hoped to receive wealth from her first husband's estate. When he received
nothing from her, he published in the
Daily Chronicle that she was lazy and a drunkard.
Even though Isabella Ross bought, for herself, 100 acres and became the first woman
and Indigenous landowner in
British Columbia, her story has been forgotten, even her grave in the Ross Bay Cemetery,
Victoria,
BC was unmarked for decades and her named attached to it went unremembered. Only recently has Isabella Ross has been remembered and recognized for her incredible
position in colonial
Victoria society.
- 1. Isabella Mainville Ross: First Female Métis Pioneer of Victoria, BC Métis Federation, 10 July 2014; Sylvia Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes of Five Founding Families of Victoria, BC Studies, no.115/116, (Winter 1997/98), p.156.
- 2. Isabella Mainville Ross, BC Métis Federation.
- 3. Ibid.
- 4. Richard Watts, The woman behind Ross Bay, Times Colonist, 20 June 2013.
- 5. Ibid.; Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes, p.170.
- 6. Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes, p.160.
- 7. Ibid., 169.
- 8. Isabella Mainville Ross, Old Cemeteries Society of Victoria.