b. 1826-01-18
d. 1904-03-04
Joseph Trutch made a series of key political connections while working as an engineer
and surveyor on the west coast of North America, that would lead to him being appointed
the first Lieutenant Governor of
British Columbia from
1871 to
1876. He had an active role in the dispossession of Indigenous Peoples land in Canada.
Most notably, he created the Indian Land Policy of
1864 and falsified records from the former
Governor Douglas, to radically decrease the amount of land for reserves. He left a lasting political legacy of land negotiations that are only beginning to
be resolved in the twenty-first century.
Joseph Trutch was born on
18 January 1826 in Ashcott, England, to
William Trutch and Charlotte Hannah Barnes. He remained a British loyalist his entire life, returning to Somerset at age 64 until
his death in
1904. He spent the majority of his professional career in North America, arriving in
British Columbia June 1859, after completing extensive survey work in
California,
Oregon, and Illinois.
As a loyalist he sought a position in the colonies of British Columbia.
His father aided in securing a
recommendation from
Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton to then-Governor of
British Columbia James Douglas commending Trutch's character, and he quickly establish himself in the colonies. The colonial government awarded Trutch considerable contracts in road construction
and more survey contracts; his most notable engineering achievement of the Alexandira
Suspension Bridge was during this time.
Following the Alexandria Bridge construction, Trutch was appointed to Chief Commissioner
of Lands and Works for
British Columbia. Controversy currently surrounds Trutch's political legacy, beginning with his views
on Indigenous Peoples. Trutch justified reducing reserves from 100 acres of land to
10 acres without any form of compensation, stating that
the land, much of which is either rich pasture, or available for cultivation and greatly
desired for immediate settlement, remains in an unproductive condition, is of no real
value to the Indians and utterly unprofitable to the public interests- I am therefore
of the opinion that these reserves should be in almost every case be very materially
reduced.
With the help of
Governor Frederick Seymour, Trutch's goal of re-allocating land promised to Indigenous communities for reserves
to white settlers without any form of compensation was achieved. As Fisher notes
Native objections were ignored and Trutch deliberately falsified the record of Douglas's
dealings in an effort to justify the change in policy.
Due to his legacy of dismissing Indigenous rights and title, Trutch has become one
of
British Columbia's most controversial historical figures.
- 1. Jerry Olsen, It takes more than a good resume to get a government contract. John Trutch (1828)
Sir Joseph William Trutch (1826-1904) , Surveying North of the River 2, 2018, 1.
- 2. John Burrows, The Rule of Law, Aboriginal Peoples, and Colonialism in Recovering Canada: The Resurgence of Ingidenous Law University of Toronto, 115.
- 3. Robin Fisher, Trutch, Sir Joseph William, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. Jerry Olsen, It takes more than a good resume to get a government contract. John Trutch (1828)
Sir Joseph William Trutch (1826-1904) , Surveying North of the River 2, 2018, 2.
- 6. Lytton to Douglas, 16 September 1858, 10454, CO 398/1, 101.
- 7. Robin Fisher, Trutch, Sir Joseph William, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 8. Ibid.
- 9. Joseph W. Trutch, Lower Fraser River Indian Reserves in Papers Connected with Indian Land Question Victoria, Richard Wolfenden, Government Priner, 1875.
- 10. Robin Fisher, Trutch, Sir Joseph William, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.