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YE.VliS IS P.1MT18II COLUMBIA AND VANCOUVER ISLAND. AN ACCOUNT OV TIIEIK FORESTS, III VERS, COASTS, GOLD FIELDS, AND RESOURCES FOR COLONISATION. I'.Y (•U.M31AXJ)ER R. C. MAYNE, R.N.. F.IJ.(;.S. \mi!>f:r, \ llt.CE. WITH MAP AND ILLUSTRATIONS. I.OM)()X: .lUUN MUKUAV, ALDEMAULE STREET. TUi: rif)lil III' Tramlitiim it rtfcrval. ■^T^--Jl«rf»»Tr.-'-" ^■■J'i^'jlt.r* CO. 184643 l/'llf^yAye. 1^ STRKKT, AND CHARING CROSS. TO CAPTAIN GEORGE H. RICHARDS, R.N., OF H.M. SURVEYING SHIP ' HECATE,' UNDER WHOM I HAD THE HAPPINESS TO SERVE DURING THE TIME I WAS IN THE COLONIES I HAVE , , \ ATTEMPTED TO DESCRIBE, THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED, BY HIS SINCERE FRIEND, THE AUTHOR. ^ *. . P R E F A C E. So little is yet known about British Columbia and Vancouver Island that the Author hopes his experience of four years, spent in the survey and exploration of both these Colonies,' may be found of interest. To Dr. Wood, K.N., of H.M.8. * Hecate,' to the several travellers from whom information has been obtained and whose names occur in the book, as well as to the others— too many to enumerate— who have assisted him in various ways, the Author begs to return his thanks. To Mr. E. P. Bedwell, II.N., Dr. Lyall, and Dr. Lindley, for the sketches which enliven the text, his thanks are also gi-atefully tendered ; and last, but by no means least, to Mr. WiUiam J. Stewart— without whose aid these pages would probably never have seen the light -he gives his most cordial thanks. For any errors which may occur in the latter part of the book the author claims the reader's indulgence, as the revision of it has b -: carried on in great haste amid the bustle of fitting out a .hip for foreign service. H.M.S. ' Eclipse,' Octoler, 1802. li i .i I € N T E N T 8. CHAP TEH I. Apixiiiitmeiit to II.M.S. 'riiiini)cr' — Historical Ski'tdi of tlu' Ikiti.sh PosscsMund in North-West Aiuerica 1 CHAPTER II. liCavo Eiij:»lftnil — Arrive at Samlwich Islands — 8tay at Honolulu — Kiug Knni(-liani(-lia and Trinee T-ot — TIk' Straits of Juan dr Fuca- Description of — Arrival at Es(iuimalt — Description of, and of Victijria 11 CHAPTER III. Seniiahnioo Bay — ( iulf of (ieorp;ia — Visit Nanaimo — Coal — The Haro Archipelago — Discovery of (iold — Conse((Uent Excitement— (Jrowth of Victoria — Arrival of II.M.S. ' Ilavannali ' — Threatened disturl)ancc at Victoria — Arrival of Colonel Moodv — Aliatenient of the Golil Fever ;}2 CHAPTER IV. Humour of distm-bance at Yale — ' I'lumper ' proceeds to I^angley — Canoe' J. .. .. •• •• •• tAttft IC% i I ^ i.l ClIAl'TEK IX. Jcrvis Inlet — OvltIuikI to i'ort J'ciiilxrton • Ship gocn to oh.scrvc Kclip.srt — To \iiimiiiio witli 'Ali'rt' utnl ' Tiirna;,'imt ' — ' TiTiimptiil ' runs iii^hore — 'Alert' i»c('oin|ianiert 'riuniper' to Fort Itnpert -- lie.->eiie of Feiimle Sliive — Ship ^ors idiinil West ( 'otist of I.sliiud, ami 1 p) dowu inside ill hoat and up S(juu\Muisiit Kiver in cauoo - Arrival of II. M.S. •Htrato' CHAPTElt X. Tiun over to tiie 'Hecate^ ' — Preparations for Sununer's Work — Trip lo West Cloa.st to look for the ' Forward ' Visit Nootka SoutkI — Survey of Unrelay and ('laynipiot Sounds, and UenmrUs on AVcst Coast of the Island — I'rouiotiou — Shijt runs asliore » li^ *• ** 2/1 CHAPTER XI. Indians — The Coast Trilies — Class! fieution -Planners and Custoius-<-" Notes from -Mr. Duncan's Journal — Iiduud Tribes — Number — Iufot« mation concerning them .. „ „ .. ,, CHAPTER Xlh Ueligious and Educational condition of the Colonic* .. *• .. «, CHAPTER XIII. Koutes to Uritisii Columbia — Agricultural Kesourcoa of British Culumbia and Vancouver Island — Natural History — Land System — Koads, Cliiuiite, &e ,. .. ,» .« ., ., ., ,, CHAPTER XIV* IMiueral wealth of BritLsh Columbia, Summary of— Conclusion «* «« Hii SV5 '^b-i iZ9 APPENDIX, Explorations in Jervis Inlet and Desolation Sound, British Columbia. By Mu. William DowNiE 447 List of Trees, Shrubs, Cirasses, ilc, found in Vancouver Island. By Dk. FuuiJES 45.") 4.")« 401 , 4(55 lianil Proclamations relating to British Columbia Lund Proclamations relating tf) Vancouver Island Index ( »i ) Fort J{ii]Kii » •* It |0# «crvc I<]<'li(wi ll^'lUlt' IllliS I f,'<» vn, unsuccessful settlement bearing his name at the entrance of the Columbia River. Before this time, the shores of the Pacific, the theatre of these comparatively unimportant events, attracted little if any attention from the Governments, who were yet prepared to lay claim to their exclusive possession, whenever their occupation should appear valuable. About this period, how- ever, the attention of the American Congress was directed to the districts through which the Columbia flowed ; and the subject being referred to a Committee of the Senate, a report was made by it, that all the territory in question, from the 41st to the 53rd, if not to the GOth degree, belonged to the United States. Their claim to its possession was grounded upon the piu-chase of Louisiana from France in the year 1808, and the acquisition of what titles of discovery and occupation might be possessed by Spain, by the Florida Treaty of 1818 ; together with the rights conferred by the settlement of American citizens there. No active steps, however, to enforce these pretensions were taken until 1823, when Pre- sident JMonroe, in his Address to Congress, asserted that the American continent was henceforth not to be considered as subject for colonisation by any European Powers. There were but two Powers with any pretensions to oppose the claim of the United States to the exclusive possession of the shore of the Pacific, viz., Russia and Great Britain. The former had for many years been settled in some force at Sitka and the neighbourhood. Both by Great Britain and the States of America, the right of Russia to the districts which she had in some measure colonised was readily con- ceded. In 1824 a convention was entered into between that Power and America, bv which Russia bound herself not to Mi;Uc CllAl". 1. THE BOUNDAIIY QUESTION. [) encroacli south of a line drawn at ^-i^ 40', and in the follow- ing year Great Britain entered into a similar treaty ; both nations thus confirming the claims of llussia, but careful in no way to compromise their own, to the country south of the line of boundary thus laid down. It can serve no purpose to rake uj) the yet live embers of the irritating and dillicult boundary dispute between this country and the United States, relative to the possession of that i)ortion of the shore of the Pacific which has since proved so valuable. It is sutlicient to say, that by conven- tions renewed at intervals, the territories and waters claimed by either Power west of the llocky Mountains were declared to be free and open to the vessels, citizens, and subjects of both; until, urged by their growing importance, and the impatience of settlers east of the llocky ]Mountains to colonise them, the boundary question assumed the importance of a great political crisis, more than once threatening to result in Avai'. Happily this was averted, and in 1844, by a treaty, the details of which were settled at Washington by Mr. IJichard Pakeuham on behalf of the British Government, the line of boundary from the Rocky Mountains to the sea was declared to be the 49th parallel of north latitude. The course which the line should take upon reaching the sea — fertile as it has been and may still be in difficulties and misunderstandings — was thus declared to continue to " the centre of the Gulf of Georgia, and thence southward, through the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver Island, to the Straits of Juan de Fuca." It was subsequently found that there were three separate channels existing between the island and the mainshore, and contention arose as to the construction of the treaty in respect to them. In the year 1856 the American Government appointed a commission to settle this disputed line of boundary after it reached the sea-coast, as well as to determine the coui'se which the parallel of 49° took across the continent. I- ill, 1 "ill m m ' 'Hi'. IIP' 10 SURVEY OF DISPUTED WATEUS. Chap. f. Tlie English Government in tlieir turn appointed Commis- sioners for tlio like purpose. Captain Prevost was tbe first seleeteil, and in the autumn of 1856 was ordered to eonimis- sion II.iM.S. ' Satellite ' and proceed to Vancouver Island. It was then discovered that no accurate chait of the channels in disjtute between the island and the mainshoro existed ; that the position and extent of the group of islands among them were very imperfectly known ; while the relative value of the channels themselves could only be arrived at from such meagre information as the masters of two or three Hudson Bay Company's trading vessels were able to give. It was therefore determined that a surveying vessel sIkjuUI also be despatched — in the first place to make a complete survey of the disputed waters, and afterwards to continue it along the coasts of Vancouver Island and the mjiinlaud of the British territory. For this purpose Captain George Henry llichards was selected, and commissioned II.jM.S. ' Plumper.' The ' Plumper ' is what is called in the navy an auxiliary steam-sloop, barque rigged, of OO-horse power, and armed with two long 32-pounders and ten short ones, of a pattern which has now nearly gone out of date. She had been paid off from a long cruise on the West Coast of Africa the day before Captain llichards commissioned her, and it was not to be wondered at that when she came to be " overhauled " in the dock she was found very rotten in some parts. It was discovered also that she would be very inefficient for the sur- veying work unless a chart-room were built on deck, and accordingly this had to be done. Owing to these causes her preparation for sea was greatly prolonged, and we were not ready for a start till the middle of IMarch. Captain Richards was well known both as a surveyor and an Arctic explorer, he having been the Commander of Sir E. Belcher's ship the * Assistance,' in the search for the remains of the Franklin expedition, and having while there made one of the longest and most harassing sledge-journeys upon record. 3 II CHAV. I. THE 'I'LUMPKU' COMMISSIONKI). 11 ted Comrais- Nvas the first I to commis- r Island. It 3 cliauncls in 'xisted; that among thorn value of the ; from such ireo Hudson ivo. It was onld also be )to survey of it along the the British iry liichards in auxiliary and armed f a imttern 1 been paid ica the day it was not rerhauled " ts. It was or the sur- deck, and causes her ) were not •veyor and r of Sir E. le remains ade one of on record. Jle had previously assisted in the surveys of the Falkland Islands, New Zealand, Australia, &c. Besides the command of this survey, Captain liiehards received an appointment as Second C(»mmissioner for the settlement of the bomidary, in conjunction with Ca[)tain Prevost. Of the other oilicers, j\[r. Bull, the master, was the prinei[)al surveyor, and with him were Messrs. Pender and liedwell, then seeond masters, now masters. These three, with the captain, made the whole of the surveying staiT at starting. Of course in ilve years several changes have taken place. On Mr. Bull's death j\[r. I*ender became the senior assistant-surveyor, and other junior oflieers have learnt the work and have been added to the strength of the survey. The surgeon, at that time Dr. Forbes, under- took the Natural History and Botanical departments ; but he was likewise ehanged. lie was invalided when the ship arrived at Valparaiso, and relieved by Dr. Lyall. Subse- quently when the Land Boundary Commission, under Colonel Hawkins, arrived at Vancouver Island, Dr. Lvall was detaehed from the ship to them, and his place taken on board by Dr. Wood. The repairs which were found necessary before the 'Plumper' could start for so long a voyage, kept us in I*ortsmouth Harbour till the 11th of March, on which day we made our trial trip on the measured mile in fStokes Bay. The average speed obtained was six knots (nautical miles of 2000 yards each) per hour, which, although as much as we expected from the horse-power of the vessel, we afterwards found by no means adequate to the rushing currents in the inner waters between Vancouver Island and British Columbia. Becurring to my description of our destination, I may remark that the manner in which the northern shores of the Pacific are parcelled out is simply thus. From the Mexican boundary, as far north as the 4ytli degree of latitude, the Americans hold possession ; a few colonists at long intervals being thinly scattered over the states of Oregon and Wash- II'' I'liiii |1 III S 12 HUDSON BAY COMPANY. Chap. I. ingtoii. Vancouver Island luul in the year 1843 first heen occupied by the Iludsiju IJay Company, a party of >vli08o employes, landing at Vi(^toria, had settled there, building a fort and laying tho foundation of what became an important trading station. In 184!) a grant of the ishmd to tlie same Company was made by the Home Government, upon condition that within five yoai'U steps should be taken by tho lessees for its perfect colonisation. What steps were taken, however, proved unsuccessful ; and at this time, beyond a somewhat prosperous station and farm at Victoria, a fort at llupert, in tho north of tho island, and a small settlement at Nanaimo, no use of Vancouver Island was made by the English. Of the mainland, secured to Great Britain by the boundary treaty of 1844, and known then as New Caledonia, tho same Company also held possession under a similar grant. It was used by them exclusively for the purposes of their fur-trade, a few forts at distant intervals sheltering them from the Indians and sei-ving as trading stations. North of tliu British possessions the Russians were busy, too, in the pursuit of furs, which they exported to China and their own country. The mainland of their possessions was utterly valueless for any other purpose, the islands only being available for agriculture. They, too, possessed their forts and factories, but in greater number and strength than the English, having taken further trouble to colonise the country. The aboriginal inhabitants pay formal allegiance to the Russian-American Trading Company, in the service of which they are bound to enter, if required ; while from the more distant tribes tribute of furs is enforced. Moreover the Company possess twenty-eight establishments south of Beli- ring Straits ; and on Baranof Island, at Sitka, or New Archangel, the capital of Russian-America, a fortified town will be found, with arsenals, shipyard, foundry, hospital, a church, splendidly adorned shops, schools, library, museum, and laboratory. 4 Cuw. I. IIUSSIAN SF/ITF.EMKNTS. 13 Such, briefly, was tho rondition of tho nonrlocfjd and unknown land for wKwh the 'Plnmju'r' was hound. Tlii.s much was known of it : and that its anui, cxchisivo of Van- couvor Ifshind, itsolf half tho sizo of Indand, was about tlirco timot.a*' Itvfjoas Oreat lUitain, with a coast-lino of 500 niilcs, inuth n^) of lake and mountain, forest, marsh, and prairio. 14 PASSAGE OUT. Chap. II. ,.iVli CIIAPTEK II. iiiiyii riiiill Leave England — Arrive at Sanchvicli Islands — Stay at Honolnlu — King Kiune-luune-Iia and Prince Lot — Tlie Straits of Juan de Fuca — Descrip- tion of — Arrival at Esqnimalt — Description of, and of Victoria. On the 12th of March mc left Portsmouth for Plymouth, getting away from England finally on the 2nth of the same month. During our passage out we met with several acci- dents, which had the effect of delaying our arrival at our destination for a considerable while, but which would be of little if any interest to the reader. I may say shortly, then, that after springing a leak in the Bay of Biscay, which com- pelled us to run in to Lisbon, and breaking the screw-shaft a few days later, which left us for some time without tlie aid of steam, we reached Rio Janeiro on the 2otli of IMay. We were detained here until the necessary repairs could be effected, leaving it on the 9th of July. After meeting with nothing more remarkable than a heavy gale off the River Plate, we entered the Straits of Magellan on the 29th of July, and were detained there bv stress of weather for three weeks. On the 19tli of August, however, we passed out, and picking up a fair wind, reached Valparaiso on the 28th of the same month. Starting thence on the 8th of September, we arrived, after a pleasant passage, at Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, on the ICth of October. Although our stay at Honolulu was short, opportunity was given us to see a great deal of the place and neighbourhood. Of late years, from being a mere Indian village, it has become an important harbour for the sliips engaged in whale-fishing in the North Pacific. This is conducted principally by vessels of the United States; and the white population of Honohilu, Chap. IT. KING KAME-HAME-IIA. 15 therefore, is almost exclusively American. It is no secret, I believe, that great efforts have been made by these settlers and their Government for the annexation of the Sandwich Islands, In this they have been baffled by tlieir own unpopu- larity, and the strenuous counter-exertions of the advisers of King Ivame-hame-ha II., who have been hitherto selected from the few English and Scotch residents in his dominions. Kame-liame-ha, indeed, is essentially English in his liabits, dress, the fashion of his residence, and in his system of govern- ment, which is enlightened and progressive. Ho lias for his chief adviser a very worthy old Scotch gentleman, by name AVylie ; and his queen is the daughter of an Irish settler in his dominions, and a very pleasant, sensible woman. Personally this monarch with the unpronounceable name is a well-educated, gentlemanly man, who speaks English and French fluently, and who has travelled a good deal both in Europe and America. It is said that, when travelling in the States, ho was not allowed at some place to join the table dilate, on account of his having black blood in his veins, although he is really little, if at all, darker than a sunburnt Englishman. Considering the many temptations incidental to his position, and that his royal father was, I believe, almost a savage, Kame-hame-ha II. may, in extenuation of his evil habits, offer pleas which have before now excused the much more glaring excesses of enlightened European monarchs and gentlemen. Unfortunately, King Kame-hame-ha is not without many social faults ; but though addicted, as there is no doubt he is, to the pleasures of the table and conviviality generally, I believe him to be anything but the drunkard and debauchee that I have heard liim called by some of his guests and critics. Something — much, I think — should be conceded to the influences of his childhood, and the difliculties of his maturer years. Son of a father who, although wild and uncultivated as any North American Indian, had seen enough of the ad- u I II I 1)1 ii!! ! nil '■11 ill i iiiiij i ilTil I Mil! t II I i! M I M ■. m ■ ii'i i- ^:,i,i l^lii I 16 KING KAME-HAME-HA. Chap. TI. ■'■': I i : vantages of oducation to desire them for his son, lie was put under competent masters, and afterwards sent to travel ; tlnis European habits, tastes, and manners were engrafted upon his semi-wild nature. Of course these placed a barrier for ever between him and his native subjects. He could no longer associate with them, and he naturally joined the only society that was in the least suited to him — viz., that of the American residents. Among these he had offered him the choice of the American missionaries or merchants. The former, though most exemplary and useful men, who have done a great deal of good among the natives and the crews of the whaling ships, led lives far too austere and ascetic to please the young monarch. The others, however ineligible asso- ciates for a young man with strong passions, had at least the merit of being pleasant companions. It is therefore, perhaps, little to be wondered at that he should have preferred their society. The King may frequently be met at the houses of his foreign subjects, at their balls, dinners, and supper parties ; and although always treated with a certain amount of defer- ence, and placed in the seat of honour, it sounds strange to hear a man say across the table, " King, a glass of wine with you !" or, "Do you feel like brandy-and -water tliis morning, King ? " I believe in his heart, Kame-hame-ha is thoroughly sick of his present life ; but the task of reformation is no easy one, and he has no one to help him in it. He has lately expressed a great desire that England should assist him socially and morally, as she has done politically. He has long desired the establishment of the Church of England in his dominions. So anxious is he for this, that he has post- poned the christening of his child in the hope of being able to have that ceremony performed by an English bishop. He endeavoured to enlist the sympathies and obtain the services of the Bishop of British Columbia for this purpose; and failing that, Queen Emma actually at one time contemplated ; I \\i^ ft A'- I Chap. II. A "HULA-HULA." 17 making the voyage to England with her child, with the double object of having him baptised by episcopal hands, and of inducing our gracious Queen to become his sponsor.* During our stay at Honolulu, the King's brother, Prince Lot, acceded to our request to show us a native dance, or Hula-hula, such as we had read of in the voyages of the old explorers. It was common enough in the days of Cook and Vancouver, but has gone out of fashion since quadrilles and champagne have been introduced at Honolulu. Probably the missionaries have had much to do with its abolition, and indeed no objection they may entertain to it can be con- sidered unreasonable. A Hula is a festive entertainment which I find it some- what difficult to describe. The one we saw was held near a village some ten or twelve miles from Honolulu, to which we all rode on the horses which are so good and plentiful in this island. Some 200 or 300 natives were present. Almost all the dancers were women dressed in a costume somewhat similar to that of our European ballet-girl. The music was [)layed by some half-dozen men seated on their haunches at the far end of the room behind the dancers, who sang a wild chant, accompanied by perpetual rapping on small drams. Some of the dancers carried largo shields made of feathers bound up with very bright-coloured cloth — a gourd, fixed on to the centre at the back, forming the handle. The gourds were filled with pebbles, and were rattled with extraordinary vehemence as the dancers became excited. The contortions into which they put themselves are quite beyond my powers of description. There was, however, a certain wild grace in all their movements, and they kept admirable time with each other and to tlie music. The chants have a peculiar signifi- * Since writing the above, the King's wishes liave been acceded to. The newly-appointed Bishop of Honolulu has recently left England for his diocese, and ho carries with him the assent of her Majesty to be sponsor to King Ivame-hame-ha's heir. C i iiiii ■ ■ ;;i I ^ ii if Hi f lliillll 'i' liiHi m I'M irliti, il'ii: P- 18 SANDWICH ISLAND HORSES. Chap. IT, cance to the islanders, and many of their traditions are, I beh'eve, bound up in them. Dinner was provided before the dancing commenced, which latter was kept up with wonderful spirit all through the night. We were entertained exclusively on native dishes, spread on the ground in native fashion : knives and forks, &c., with ale and wine, forming the only foreign portion of the arrangements. Among the dishes was chowdar — a preparation of fish stewed with suet-pudding, well known in America — and several things cooked in a manner peculiar, I believe, to tlie Pacific Islands, by being wrapped up in palm-leaves and baked between two hot stones. This is called " loo-ou." Dog used to be a common article of diet in the Sandwich Islands, but of late years it has gone out of fashion. But for a very natural repugnance, that it might be difficult to master, these dogs would be by no means disagreeable ; for, as with frogs in France, they are devoted early in life to culinary purposes, and are fattened as pigs might be, and not allowed — as pigs often are — to eat flesh. The Sandwich Islands horses are very good, and wonder- fully cheap. Many have been exported to Vancouver Island with great success. The women are bold equestrians : the use of the side-saddle is entirely unknown to them, and they ride en cavalier on the Spanish saddle, which is made by the natives everywhere in the Pacific. They ride most pluckily, and by no means ungracefully, wearing a roll of bright yellow or red cloth, sufficiently long to reach below the feet ; this is fastened at the waist, and wrapped loosely round the lower limbs, so as to form a sort of loose trowsers. Before leaving Honolulu, I may mention the Sailors' Home, to which the residents liberally subscribe, from the king downwards. There is accommodation in it for nearly eighty men, and in the season when the whalers crowd into the harbour they manage to accommodate many more. The sailors are charged five dollars a week, and the • --■■'- , -■■ ■ ■ 'jf," ■ ■ ■nmmXSm '^'^^M I,M)V OK SANDWICH ISLANDS (IN llUUSKUACIv. !•,.».. IH Chap. IT. STRAITS OF FUCA. 19 officers — for whom a separate table is kept — eight dollars, for their board and lodging. *• 23rtZ October, 1857. — Sailed from Honolulu this day, and on the 9th of November entered the Strait of Juan de Fuea, which divides Vancouver Island from the mainland of the American continent. In making the Strait of Fuca, should the weather bo clear enough for the navigator to see the Flattery Rocks, he will at once know his position. These rocks, which lie twelve miles south of Cape Flattery and extend some three miles off shore, have a considerable elevation, and are sufficiently peculiar in their aspect to be readily identified. In fair weather the entrance to the Strait is plainly visible from them ; and as they are passed, the lighthouse upon Tatoosh, off Cape Flattery, opens in view. All high northern latitudes are peculiarly liable to sudden changes of weather, and in entering the Strait of Fuca all the knowledge and experience of which the navigator is master will often be called into requisition. The currents at the entrance of the Strait are not very strong, varying from one to four knots ; but their set is uncertain, although when once fairly in the Strait the flood-stream will be found to run in, and the ebb out. Captain Trivett, of the Hudson Bay Company's service, who has made many voyages to Victoria, recommends * that the south coast of Vancouver Island should be avoided in light winds, as, should it fall calm, the ship would be at the mercy of a heavy swell that almost always spts in on the shore, and renders it at times difficult to get off the coast. My subsequent experience, however, would incline me, on the contrary, to hug the island-coast, as, although the swell sets on to the island, the current appears almost invariably to set to the southward. This southerly set nearly caused the loss of H.M.S. * Hecate,' * 'Mercantile Journal ' for 1801, p. 19(; c2 ■■"Ijlllj \m' '■M :h'\i ||jpi:i| ( Ir i: hi .J ':| 20 STRAITS OF FUCA. Chap. IT. in ] Sfil, when, during a fog, she was drifted on to the rocks inside Tatoosh Island, when we thonglit we were still well north of it. Captain Stamp, an old seaman who, living at Barclay Sound, is in the habit frequently of taking small schooners to and from Victoria, also told me that he almost always experienced a southerly set at the entrance of the Straits. Off the shore of Vancouver Island a large bank, some fifteen miles in breadth, extends the whole length of the island. It is, therefore, advisable, as Captain Trivett in another place remarks, to be to the northward rather than the southward in making the Strait. The edge of this bank has been very accurately defined by the soundings of H.M.S. ' Hecate,' which have since been published ; and as the depth of water changes suddenly from 100 or 200 fathoms to no more than 40 or 50, the soundings will serve as a capital guide for the approach. The breadth of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, at its entrance between Cape Flattery, its southern point upon American territory, and Bonilla Point in Vancouver Island, is thirteen miles. It narrows soon, however, to eleven miles, can-ying this breadth in an east and north-east direction some fifty miles to the Race Islands. The coasts are remarkablv free from danger, and may, as a rule, be approached closely. Upon either side there are several convenient anchorages, which I shall shortly describe, and which may be taken advantage of by vessels inward or outward bound. They are well lighted, too, by both the countries interested in their navigation ; although, in this respect, the United States may be said to carry off the palm. They have a small staff of officers whose duty it is to attend to the lighthouses on the coast ; and until the recent home exigencies of the United States, a steamer, the ' Shubrick,' was especially detailed for this service. To return, however, to a description of the Strait of Juan Chap. 1 1. Ciup. II. STRAITS OF PUCA. 21 to the rocks ro still well 10, living at iking small t he almost ance of tho bank, some gth of the Trivett in rather than ' this lank 1 of H.M.S. 3 tlie depth oms to no i a capital s entrance American s tliirteen canying some fifty fably free i closely, chorages, taken They are in their ates may staff of !S on the United ailed for of Juan M do Fuca. Upon tho northom side, from tho shore of the island, densely-wooded hills rise gradnally to a considerable height ; while on the southern, or American shore, tho rugged outline of the Olympian range of snow-clad mount;iins, vary- ing in elevation from four to seven thousand feet, and in breaks of which peeps of beautiful country may be seen, extend for many miles. As the Strait is ascended the tides and currents, which at its junction with the Pacific are of comparatively little strength, become embarrassing, and often dangerous, to the navigator. In the neighbourhood of the Race Islands, where the Strait takes an east-north-east direction and meets the first rush of the waters of the Gulf of Georgia, which have been pent-up and harassed by the labyrinth of islands choking its southern entrance, the tidal irregularities become so great and perplexing as to baffle all attemi)ts at framing laws calculated to guide the mariner. Fortunately, the course of the winds can be ascertained with greater accuracy. At all seasons they blow up or down the Strait of Fuca. During the summer the prevailing breezes from north-west or south-west take a westerly direc- tion within the Strait ; while the south-east gales of winter blow fairly out. The mariner, however, running out of the Strait with a south-east gale, must be prepared for a shift to the southward immediately he opens Cape Flattery. This generally occurs, and it is of the first importance to be ready for it ; as, of course, the southerly wind catcliing a ship un- }>repared drives her on to the dead lee-shore of the island, off which it is no easy job to work. Upon her last voyage home the Hudson Bay Company's bark 'Piincess lioyal,' under the command of the Captain Trivett I have before alluded to, was placed in great jeopardy for a whole night from this cause. At the Eace Islands the Strait may be said to terminate, as it there opens out into a large expanse of water, which forms a playground for the tides and currents, hitherto pent up I.' I >1 >' iiU. hif i \iA 22 ANCHORACfES. Chap. II. among tlio islands in the comparatively narrow limits of the Gulf of Georgia, to frolic in. Between Port San Juan, which is the first anchorage on the north side of the Strait just inside the entrance, and the Eace Islands two good anchorages occur. Sooke Inlet, the more westward of these, lies some nine miles from the Race Islands, and forms a splendid basin a mile and a half square, and perfectly land-locked. The entrance, however, is so narrow and tortuous, as to make Sooke Harbour of little practical value. Some farms have, however, been established there, and what land there is in its neighbourhood available for cultivation has been found to be good and fertile. Becher Bay lies between Sooke and the Race Islands, some four miles from the latter. The depth of water at its entrance varies from twenty to fifty fathoms, with a rocky and irregular bottom ; and H cannot be recommended as an anchorage, being too open to winds from the south and west. On the south side of the Sti-ait is Neah Bay, four miles east-noi-th-east from Tatoosh Island, offering a safe and convenient anchorage to vessels meeting south-west or south-east gales at the entrance of the Strait. Indeed, it is very fairly sheltered from all but north-west winds, and if threatened by ihem a vessel will generally be able to run out of the bay inside the adjacent island of Wyadda, which is protected on the north-east side. It was in Neah Bay, how- ever, that the Hudsoji Bay Company's brig ' Una ' was lost in 1857. She had come down from Queen Charlotte Island, whither she had been sent to examine into some reported gold discoveries, and was lying here when a heavy north-west wind set in. Most of the crew were on shore at the Indian village, and the 'Una' v/as anchored in deep water. The anchor could not be weighed, and before they could get sail on ready for cutting the cable, she had drifted so much that, when they tried to run through between the island and the main, they grounded f)n the point. The brig was totally lost, but the ClIAI'. II. Ijp IAN FISHERMEN. 23 nits of the nan, which Strait just inchorages , lies some ndid basin ked. The I to make nins have, sre is in its )und to be mds, some ter at its I a rocky ded as an ind west, our miles safe and i-west or ieed, it is is, and if run out which is 3ay, how- as lost in 3 Island, rted gold ^est wind 1 village, i anchor )n ready len they tin, thev but the "Hm crew were saved and fivatcd ki lly by tho Indians, ho muster here in large nuiiibers, owuig to tho quantity of cunstanee ■1 (1, there ■ ^^^ r likely ^-■^ 17. As It as an ittlo up j^H arbour, ire de- ;. 'fl Pacifie th the naval ClIAl'. II. ESQlIIMAL'r. 'J5 than i)ai 1 for its construction; and wo shouhl not be dcjien- dcnt, as we aro now, ui>on the Anierioan dock at .A! are Island, San Francisco, for the rc})air of our shijts of war. Hnring the four years of my service on this station, such a dock would have been used on live occasions by Her ]\rajcsty's ships, and at least a dozen times by merchant-vessels, who, as it was, were put to great inconvenience and even danger. For instance, when 1I.]M.S. 'Hecate' ran ashore in the autumn of 1801, wo were a fortnight at Es(piimalt patching her up, before wo ventured to take her to San Francisco, whither after all wo had to be convoyed by another uuui-of- war. This occurred too, as it may be remembered, at a tinu! when war with the Unitetl States scorned immiuent. Had it broken out, the ' Hecate ' must have been trapped, and the servicis of a powerful sttamer would have been lost to tho country. Es(piimalt has seen, and is still likely to see, many start- ling changes. I found it altered very much from the time wlien as a midshipman, 1 lirst made its acquaintance in l8-l!). In that year, wheu we spent some weeks in Escpiimalt llarb(jur on board H.3E.S. * Inconstant,' there was not a house to bo seen ou its shores ; we used to lire .shot and shell as we liked about the harbour, and might send parties ashore and cut as much wood as wo needed without the least chance of interruption. Now, as we entered, I was surprised to catch sight of a row of respectable, well-kept buildings on the south- east point of the harbour's mouth, with pleasant gardens in front of them, from which a party of the crew of the ' Satellite,' who had been expecting us for some time, received us with a round of hearty cheers. This was, we found, a Naval Hospital erected in 185-1, when we were at war with liussia, to receive the wounded from Petropaulovski, and since that time continued in use. Opposite the hospital, our attention was directed to a very comfortable and, standing where it did, a rather imposing residence, which was the house of ii/y ■ !, k Ml! KfiJ B n ii Inl !* m 26 VICTORIA. Chap. II. Mr. Cameron, Chief Justice of Vancouver Island, and in wliicli I have since spent many a pleasant hour. At the head of Constance Cove, at the east end of the harbour, might be seen through the trees the buildings of Constance farm, in the occupation of the Puget Sound Company ; and as we held on beyond the hospital, we came in view of the site of the present town of Esquimalt, whose growth is of a more recent date than that of which I am now writing. Nor were other signs of the already growing importance of Esquimalt wanting. It must be remembered that as yet gold, although known by some to exist both upon the island and mainland, had attracted no notice ; but the colony was gi'owing slowly yet surely without its stimulating aid. Further up the harbour stood another building, named Thetis Cottage, and at the north entrance of Constance Cove the new bailiff of the Puget Sound Company was building a house. So, everywhere ashore, there were changes and im- provement visible. Nine years back, we had to scramble from the ship's boat on to the most convenient rock : now Jones's landing-place received us ; and in the stead of forcing a path over the rocks and through the bush to the Victoria Inlet, whence, if a native should happen to be lounging about in the Indian village of the Songhies, and should see us or hear our shouts and bring a canoe over, we might hope to reach Victoria, a broad carriage-road, not of the best, perlia])s, and a serviceable bridge, Wcre found connecting Esquimalt Harbour with Vi':'toria. A^ictoria, too, was altering for the better, though slowly^ The Hudson Bay Company's fort was still the most imposing building in the town, and its officers the chief people there ; but it had gTovn into a more important station of the gi'eat Fur Company than of yore, and IMr. Finlayson, whom we had left chief in command nine years before, we now found Mr. Douglas's lieutenant. As the capital of the island, Victoria undoubtedly owes its ^ Chap. II. VICTORIA. 27 Idiiig a pre-eminence to Mr. Douglas, the present governor. As far back as 1843, when it was considered desirable by the Com pany to establish a station in the island, Victoria had been selected by him for that purpose ; and later, when the Oregon boundary question was settled, and the mouth of the Eiver Columbia, on which Fort Vancouver, the principal station of the Company in Western America, stood, fell into the hands of the United States, it was to Victoria that their head-quarters were transferred by Mr. Douglas, who was then, and had been for some time, their cliief agent in the countries west of the Rocky ]\Iountains. Mr. Douglas was guided in his selection of Victoria simply by its possessing qualities which mot the requirements of the Company he represented. No one ever dreamt then of the mineral wealth of the valleys that sloped from the liocky IVEountains to the sea; or that in a few years cities (I shoidd say, perhaps, their promise) would spring up upon shores almost unknown to the civilised world. Ijut, long before the present rush of immigrants to these regions, Victoria, as a port, had been virtually superseded by the adjacent harbour of Es([uimalt. The entrance to Victoria is narrow, shoal, and intricate ; and with certain winds a heavy sea sets on the coast, which renders the anchorage outside unsafe, while vessels of burden cannot run inside for shelter unless at or near high water. Vessels drawing 14 or 15 feet may, under ordinary circumstances, enter at high water, and ships drawing 17 feet have done so, although only at the top of spring-tides. But it is necessary always to take a pilot, and the channel is so confined and tortuous tliat a long ship has considerable difficulty in getting in. \\'ith every care, a large proportion of vessels entering the port run aground. No doubt steps might be taken to improve the harbour of Victoria, but it is highly proldemaiical whether it can ever be made a safe and convenient port of entry for vessels even of moderate tonnage at all times of the tide and weather. I 'nder the most favourable circumstances, accidents 28 VICTORIA. Chap. II. Im; -*!'.. happen constantly. Ijasfc year, and again this spring, the ' PrincesH Eoyal,' a vessel of but 600 tons' burden, which goes from London to Vancouver Island every year^ in the service of the Hudson Bay Company, grounded in entering Victoria, although she was commanded by a very able man, thoroughly acquainted with the place, and was towed at the time by a steamer which plied in and out of the harbour two or throo times at least every week. Nor when she was brought into the harbour was there sufficient depth of water to allow her to get alongside the wharf, and her cargo had to be discharged into lighters. Under these circumstances, therefore, although Victoria is, no doubt, quite well i;dapted for the vessels trading up the Fraser River, and the many small craft that will be required among the islands and ports of the coast, ships of larger tonnage mu;t always prefer Esquimalt. I cannot imagine any sensible master of an ocean ship endea- vouring to wriggle his vessel into Victoria with the larger and safer hi rbour o'" Es ^uimalt handy. Very possibly, could the future have been foreseen, Victoria would not have been selected as the cliief commercial port of Vancouver Island. But the selection has been made, the town is built or building, the commerce already attracted. The fact must be regarded as accomplished beyond the possi- bility of change ; and the only thing that can now be done is to connect it with the harbour of Esquimalt, toNvards which task the natural formation of the country lends itself ad- mirably. In the way of this, however, stand several obstacles, and chief among them, perhaps, is the jealousy of the landholders of Victoria, who, believing that the elevation of Esquimalt into the harbour of the colony would lower the value of their property, have persistently opposed such a project. Nor have the landholders of Esquimalt been altogether free from blame. Irritated by the opposition of Victoria, and convinced that in the end theii' demands must be conceded, they have Chai'. it. ring, the tiich goes e service Victoria, loroughly ime by a ) or three ught into allow her ischarged although le vessels craft that the coast, limalt. I lip endea- lie larger 1, Victoria ial port of made, the attracted. the possi- be done is irds which itself ad- : tacles, and andholders Esquimau ue of their ject. Nor r free from . convinced they have I If I'. ■ n n p » s ClIAI'. II. VICTORIA. 20 ii ■' ■■A Li O placed a value n})OU their land which is quite exorbitant. ]\[any of the iiiercluints of Victoria would, I believe, lon^ alace, is my first James )ickets, on Mr. L side of e Com- i Bay, i group a: if i » II A I" I ' ' 32 GULF OF GEORGIA. Chap. HI CITArTEK TIL Semiahmoo Bay — Gulf of Goorj^ia — Visit Nnnaimo — Coal — The Ilaro Arcliipclago — Di.scovory of Gold — CoiiHcquont Excitemoiit — Growth of Victoria — Arrival of II.M.S. 'llavannah' — Threatened distnrhanco nt Victoria — Arrival of Colonel Moody — Abatement of tiio Gold Fever. The first duty which devolved upon (,'aptain Iviehards on the 'Plumper' reaching these waters was the determination of the exact spot where the parallel of 49° north latitude met the sea. This was known approximately, but it was necessary now to determine it accurately as a starting-point for the Commission which was to carry tlie lino across the continent, and also for the purposes of the Naval Commission to which Captain Richards belonged, and whose business it was to determine the channel by which it was intended, by the Ti-eaty of 1844, that the boundary-line should pass to the Strait of Fuca. Accordingly, after a short stay in l^^squimalt Harbour, Captain Richards decided to accomplish this part of his mission at once. The Commissioners of the United States had already made their obser\ ations, and, having encamped upon a spot of the mainland near the computed line of parallel, awaited the ' Plumjier's ' coming to confirm them. So on the 18th of November we steamed up the Haro Strait and across the Gulf of Georgia, to Semiahmoo Bay. It would be unjust to the scenery of these channels to describe it as we then saw it in the depth of winter. Although the weather was open, and there was hardly any snow upon the ground, both the shores of Vancouver and the numerous other islands that we passed wore that dull, sombre hue common to northern countries at such a season. ( AII;N. lie. UN TlIK Hcir.NDAKV I. INK, AT 1 A>r M M i|i:\ A V. iL': I 1 I !*'■ If I : 1., i, . m .9 4 f •A i'! I i I ■ I Chap. II r. • SEMI A II MOO BAY. 33 At all times, indeod, the scenery of these islftiuls, with that of the shores of the inninhind, is little attractive, covered as they are with pine-trees to the waterls edge, through w hich knobs of tra[) show in places, but in winter it is peculiarly uninviting, yemiahmoo or Boundary IJay, is an extensive sheet of water, some eight miles wide, flowing inland towards the Fraser River, from the south bank of which it is only divided by a flat and narrow delta three miles across. As the parallel of 49° north latitude meets the sea in this bay, it will be well to give a slight description of it. It lies between Birch Bay, one of Vancouver's anchorages, on the east, and Point Roberts on the west, the tip of which latter point fjxUs south of 49°. The distance between the east and west points is 8 miles, and the length of the bay northerly is 7 miles, though at low water it dries off from the head for 3 miles. There is anchorage in 7 to 15 fathoms nearly all over the bay, though the western and southern parts of it are exposed to southerly winds, which send in a considerable sea. In the eastern part there is good anchorage, except with a south- west gale. The south bluff terminates at its east end in a long, low spit, more than a mile long, covered with grass, drift- timber, and a few pines. This spit was afterwards, for a short time in the summer of 1858, the site of " Semiahmoo City," and it forms a small but snug nook called Drayton Harbour, which affords shelter from the south-wcot gales when the outer anchorage is not safe. Here we stayed until the 16th December, making the necessary observations, when, on Captain Richards proceed- ing to mark the spot where he considered the parallel met the sea, it was found to differ only eight feet from that fixed upon by the American Commissioners. Whilst here, of course, we were thrown a good deal in the way of the officers of the American Boundary Commission. Their party consisted D M EXPENSE OF RKTTEINO THE DOUNDATIY. Chap. III. of Mr. rainplx'll, the Commissionpr ; liioutonant Parko, of tlio Uiiitcfl States' 'rojiogmphical Enj;inoers, astronomer ; two or three assistant astronomers, a-doetor, naturalist, botanist, and a captain and subaltern in command of the militfiry escort, wliicli ccmsisted of alx)ut 70 men. Tiiey had been liere neaily a y<'ar, and were able to form some itlea of the work that lay before them. Some of the party were veterans at the woi-k, having been engaged upon the IMcxican Boundary Commission. Their instruments wore admirably packed for travelling, and of very superior make and workmanship. Until recently, the Americans were obliged to come to our English manufac- turers for their scientific instruments; and I thuik it was with some natural gratification on their part that our attention was drawn to the fact that these were made by ]\[r. Worde- man, an American, at Washington, who began life as a repairer of Troughton's instruments. Their estimate of the probable expense of settling this boundary question rather surprised us, and showed us at once that the cost of a clearing on this side of the continent could not bo calculated by the expense of a similar under- taking east of the liocky j\rountains. Colonel Estcourt, whose opinion was asked, and formed upon his experience of cutting a line thirty feet wide from Lake Superior to the J,ake of AN'onds, had estimated the whole expense of con- tinuing it on this side to the sea at 82,000^. ; but Mr. Camp- bell, the American ^Commissioner, told us that he had asked for an annual appropriation of 45,000/. for three years. Al- though he did not get this, h Avas much nearer the requisite sum than the other, and the issue proved the correctness of his judgment. Our work over at Semiahmoo, it was decided to return to Esquimalt until the Aveather should be fine enough to enable us to commence our surveying work. Before making that harbour, however, we visited Nanaimo, a settlement 75 miles north of Victoria, for the purpose of coaling. r. Chap. III. *arkt», of the lor ; two or )tiinist, and tfiiy escort, liorci Hourly vk that Jiiy t the woi'k, ommission. elliug, and 1 recently, I manufac- hik it was r attention [r. \\\)rde- a repairer tling this ed lis at continent ar under- Estcourt, irience of )r to the 3 of con- r. Cani])- iid asked ars. i\l- reqnisito ctncss of o return ongh to making itlemcnt coaling. ^- -ii fcl r -■ If' li *> CllAIV 111. NAN A [M() — COAL 35 C4 O s 'A Xaiiuimo is the only spot in the island wliere tlio coal is worked, althoujih it appears in several other plaees. The huibonr is good, and there is no difficulty in making it. A small island lies off the entrance, which is admirably adapted for a lighthouse when the harbour becomes of more importance. The town, such as it is, stands upon a singular promontory, which seems to have been severed from the mainland by some violent volcanic eruption which twisted the strata of which it is composed most curiously. Along the shore are the colliery buildings, and about a dozen remarkably sooty houses, inhabited by the miners and the few Hudson Bay Company's officers here. There is a resident doctor in the place, who inhabits one of these houses, and to the left of them stands the (Company's old bastion, on which are mounted the four or five honeycombed 12-pounder8, with Avhich the great Fur Company have been wont to awe the neighbouring Indians into becoming respect and submission. The coal obtained at Nanaimo, although it burns rapidly, and is excessively dirty, answers sufficiently well for steam- ing purposes, and is not likely to be soon exhausted. It has been found at several other places besides this pro- montory of Nanaimo. On Newcastle Island which, with Protection Island, form the shelter of the harbour, coal has been worked to a considerable extent, and found good. It has also been discovered crop[iing out on the Chase Iiiver, a few miles up the country, and I'urther ink nd at a spot known as Pemberton's Camp. As yet the resources of Nanaimo and its neighbourhood have not been fairly developed. The appliances for delivering the coal, for instance, were so i'aulty that a ship had to lie there often for three or four weeks before she could take in a load. There can be no doubt that with a more liberal outlay of capital, under judicious and enterprising management, Nanaimo might drive a very flourishing trade at home; and with California, ^^here coal might Ije delivered at 12 to lo dollars a ton, which woidd I. 2 ?s MARIN K MERRY-MAKING. Chap. 111. be almost as desirable as the Welsh coal, which is seldom below 20, and sometimes fetches as much as 30 dollars a ton. For domestic consumption, and for use in the factories, I believe the coal of Nanaimo to be almost equal to that brought at such an immense expense and labour from the AVelsh mines. Indeed, when I happened to be at San Fran- cisco, I was informed by one of the leading iron-manufac- turers there, that they preferred mixing Nanaimo with Welsh coal when they were able to obtain it.* One decided draw back to Nanaimo as a harbour is the exist- ence there of a species of augur- worm {^eredo navalis). It is remarkable that, although this insect infests Nanaimo to such an extent that a new pior, built there shortly before our first visit, has since given way to its ravages, we never found it elsewhere on the coasts of the island or mainland. Of course there are many inlets and harbours still so little known that no positive opinion on the subject can be entertained, but Esquimau and Victoria, among many others, are certainly free from it. January \st, 1858. — A novel feature in marine merry- making \\ as introduced by the * Satellite's ' crew, who invited our men to a dinner on board their ship. I do not imagine that such an entertainment was ever witnessed before. It was capitally managed, and the crews of both ships behaved remarkably well. The upper deck of the ' Satellite ' was covered in with flags, under which tables were laid down the whole length of the port side, at which about sixty of oiu- men dined with the ' Satellite's.' Of course we all went to look on. The sergeant of the ' Satellite's ' marines took the chair, proposing the toasts with introductory speeches that none of us need have been ashamed of. February 10. — After spending six weeks in Esquimalt * Since WTiting the above, I have been infonned that by the company which has lately purchased those mines a new wharf has been built and increased facilities for shipping coal provided. CUAP. III. 1 is seldom Dllars a ton. factories, I lal to that ir from the ; San Fran- n-manufac- with Welsh is the exist- alis). It is imo to such •re our fii'st er found it Of course known that tained, but 'e certainly ine merry- kvho invited ot imagine before. It ips behaved bellite' was d down the lixty of our all went to cs took the seches that Esquimau ompany which and iucreased K I: u i ^"''''•■"^''■^'^'•^^''-'^--•'-■'.-s...,..,..,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,. ^1'. n-.W TSl.K. I '.II.'.' .17 Chap. III. THE 'SIIAUK' IN DANGER. 37 Harliour, wo sailed this day to Port Townsond for the mails, Victoria at that time being too insignificant a place for the American mail-steamers running between Han Francisco and the Sound to put in at. Indeed, just then the letters of the ' Satellite ' and ' riumper ' formed nearly the whole contents of the English mail-bags. Upon our way a party was dropped at San Juan Island to commence surveying operations. Here we — for I formed one of them — remahied until the 27th, when we returned to Esquimalt. The weather we experienced convinced us that the middle or end of IMarch was quite early enough to commence work with any hope of success. Out of the seventeen days we spent there six only could be called fine, and at the best the cold was so severe and the fogs so frequent as to render boat-work extremely dangerous, particularly in channels so full of tide-rips and over-falls. Upon one occasion, during our stay, the ' Shark ' — as the 'Plumper's' pinnace after being raised and half-decked had been christened — was a subject of great anxiety to us. In crossing from San Juan to Esquimalt she missed her port, and having drifted during the night past the liace Kocks — it might just as well have been upon them — picked herself up in Sooke Inlet, twenty miles below Esiiuimalt. Upon another occasion, the * Shark ' was caught in a storm of wind and snow, of the violence of which the accomi)anying sketch may enable the reader to form some idea. She is there depicted dragging her anchor and drifting on shore, the men on board of her signalling to us for assistance that we were utterly unable to give them. I may mention in connection with this sketch that the hill on which we were standing watching the ' Shark's ' danger was that upon which the Americans after- wards, upon taking possession of the island, planted their battery, and near which, although the battery has disap- peared, their cam}) now stands. The few weeks of mid-winter which we luid spent in Esquimalt had been of necessity somewhat idle. How- P; |: ml.' 1 1: 38 SURVEY COMMENCED. Chap. III. ever, (is tlio colony was new to us, time did not hang at all heavy on our hands. Directly the weather would permit, it was intended to commence surveying operations. The plan of our campaign was to spend the summer at this work, return- ing to Esquimalt as winter set in again. With some inter- ruptions, this plan was adhered to, and the winter months of each year were spent ashore at our office, making up the past and preparing for the future summer's work. March 16. — We left Esquimalt to commence in earnest our sm'veying work. I have said that Captain Richard's first duty on arrival was to determine exactly where the parallel of of 49° N. met the sea. This was done in tlie winter, and we now commenced that part of our work next in import- ance, viz. to make an accurate chart of all the disputed islands and channels. As the whole summer of 1858 was taken up with this work, I will here give a description of these islands ; the name of one at least of which — San Juan — has since become famihar to every one. The American territory which joins British Columbia on the south is called " Washington Territory," and between this and the south-east shore of Vancouver Island lie the group of islands I am about to describe, all of which are included in the Haro Archipelago. In the first chapter I have said that Captains Prevost and Richards were sent out to endeavour to adjust the rival claims of our Government and that of the United States to the possession of these islands ; the wording of the treaty of 1844 being so vague as to leave the riglit to them in doubt. The treaty appears to have been made under the impres- sion that there was only one channel between Vancouver Island and the continent, and in ignorance tliat any islands existed there at all. Practically at that time there was only one channel, for the eastern, or Canal de Rosario, was the only one about which anything was known, and had been used by all the navigators who luid entered the Gulf of Georgia. Chap. III. han{^ at all J permit, it The plan of ork, return- some inter- iter months ^ing up the earnest our 's first duty parallel of v'inter, and in import- e disputed ' 1858 was cription of -San Juan abia on the tween this e group of ncluded in •evost and the rival States to ) treaty of Q doubt, e impres- /^ancouver ny islands was only 3 the only een used Greorgia. 'S- -;;';:*-*: \vj:>r (ii;rA> mh Mi, ikum siiii' ilak. I'.ijiu ;i!i CilAP. III. IIAIIO AllCHIl'KLAGO. 89 I'lio (anal do ITaro had, it, is Iriie, boon marked on the maps 1)V the Spaniards, but it was only wlioii the Hudson IJay ('(»ni])any established their liead-(puirters at Victoria that this passage became used, and even thou their vessels gene- rally Aveut up the l{osario Strait, wliich, being more familiar with, they preferred. Of the rights and wrongs of this question, which is as unsettled now as it was then, my oflicial position in the sur- vey prevents my entering into a discnssiou, and obliges mo to icIVain from anvthing like a detailed account of the " San Juan dilliculty," which, in the year following that of which I am now writing, caused so much excitement both in the colony and in England. To return to the islands : the distance between the two above-named channels is about twenty miles, and their length the sani(^, thus making a space of four hundred square miles full of islands, varying in size from ten or twelve miles long to a mere heap of trap with two or three i>ines on them. The group consists of the three important islands of San Juan, Orcas, and Lopez, and about thirty smaller ones. Of these Orcas, the most northern, is the largest, and contains the finest harbours. It h mountainous, and in most parts thickly wooded, although in the valleys there is much land available lor farming. On the east side of the island ]\Iount Constitution rises nearly five thousand feet, and is a very conspicuous object from all parts of the Gulf of Georgia. Deer abound more in Orcas than in any other of the islands. During oin* stay of about a fortnight in East Orcas Sound, ui)wards of thirty Avere shot. San Juan, the bt^st known by name, and in size the second of tliese islands, is eleven miles long, by an average of three miles wide. There is more land available for agriculture here than on any other of the group ; and of this the Hudson Bay Company took advantage some years ago, and established a sheep-farm upon it. This farm has ever since its establish- 40 IiIYSTERIOUS MURDER. Chap. III. mont been in charge of Mr. Griffin, a gentleman whoso kindness and hospitality render him every one's friend. It is situated on a beautiful prairie at the south-east end of the island, which, rising 140 feet above the water, looks most attractive to the emigi-ant passing onward towards the Fraser. I have never seen wild flowers elsewhere grow with tlie beauty and luxuriance they possess here. Perhaps I cannot illustrate the attractions of San Juan better, tlian by saying tliat it was the spot selected by his Excellency the Governor's daughter and niece in which to spend their honeymoon. At one time I believe the Company had as many as 3000 sheep on the island, distributed at various stations, all under Mr. Griffin's charge. Ilis house, which is very pleasantly situated, looks out on the Strait of Fuca, and commands a magnificent view up Admiralty Inlet. Directly in front of it lies a bank, which is a very favourite fishing-station of the Indians, where they catch a large number of salmon and halibut. This spot was, in 1859, the scene of a double murder, which excited no little speculation that will never be satisfied in this world. Mr. Griffin told the story thus. He was sitting in his bal- cony one summer afternoon, watching a vessel working her way up the Strait, when he saw two boats, each containing one man, pull past in the direction of Victoria. He was rather surprised at seeing them thus single-handed, but at that time, when the gold-fever was raging fiercely, every sort of boat was employed to cross the Strait, and he concluded that they were two Americans, making their way from Bell- ingham Bay to Victoria. They had hardly rounded the point, just beyond the farm, and passed out of his sight, when a small canoe with a single Indian shot past in the same direction. There w^as nothing in all this to attract particular notice, and Mr. Griffin was surprised when, an hour or so later, two boats, which he at once recognised as those that had so lately passed, drifted into view, floating back, to « ClIAl'. III. SAN JUAN. 41 all appoaranco, omjity. A canoo was at once sont out to them, AvluMi one was found empty, and in the oIIkt lay the body of a white man, shot, but not i»illagcd, — even the provisions tliat W(.'re in his boat being untouched. Wiio shall say who his murderer was? Had his white companion shot him, landed, and pushed off his boat ? — for, cxcc[)t in the boat in which tlio murdered man lay, not a drop of blood could be seen. Or had the Indian killed him, and had his companion, on seeing the fatal shot fired, leapt overboard, and been drowned ? If so, it was in revenge, for nothing was taken from the boats ; perhaps in performance of that duty which is still considered " sacred " — if one may use the word — among the Indians — of taking a life for a life. Lopez Island is lower and more swampy than the others. It forms the south-east end of the group, and is nine miles long by three wide. The other islets are, as I have said, mere masses of rock covered with pines, and too insignificant to claim especial notice. Thus of the whole groui) San Juan is the only island worth anything for purposes of colonisation, while it only contains a few thousand acres of good land. To allege, therefore, that an island of such paltry extent is of any real value in this respect, either to a country possessing the adjacent island of Vancouver and territory of British Columbia, — or still more to one possessing the hundreds of miles of fertile prairie con- tained in Washington Territory, Oregon, and California, — is manifestly absurd. A study of the chart — which we were then preparing — however, will show quite clearly why the country that holds Vancouver Island and Uritish Columbia must also hold San Juan Island, or give up the riglit of way to her own possessions. It will be seen at once that the party that holds this island commands the Canal de Ilaro. The narrowest part of the channel from shore to shore is five miles. This distance from San Juan can certainly be ke^pt by steamers, but they must be thoroughly acquainted with the navigation to do so, \\\ ■12 SAX JUAX. CiiAi'. !![ us they must jfuss iiisido sovorul rot'ln, uiul west of SydiKjy l.sliiiul. To n^o 11]) tlio contro of tlie clmmu'l — as h'v^ Hlii])s should do — Sail iliiuii must ho passed at two inih\s' distaiieo ; as must Ilonry and Stuart Jshiiids also, both of winch W(»uld holou^' to the nation holding the east sido of the Canal do ll.uo. San Juan ran bo of no use to anv couiiti'v hut (Ireat Dritain, except for offensive jmrposes; aud, on the other liaiid, it cannot ho of any use io her hut for (Jcfcudve purposes, as its eastern shore in no way controls or aifects the Ivosario Strait, from the western side of whi«'h it is eight miles distant at the nearest point, with J^opez Island between. The same argument might bo usetl against our holding possession of the islands which form the western side of the liosario Strait, but hen^ Nature befriends us; for during our survey we found there was a middle channel passing east wanl of San Juan and a small island north of it, called •' Waldron Island," which channel, though not so wide as cither of the others, is quite safe for steam navigation. A boundary-line, therefore, passing down the middle channel would give to the nati(ms on either side a road to their dtmiinions perf<;ctly free of interruption, and well out of shot of each other, for some years to come at least; and this certainly ap})ear8 the sim})lest and best solution of the dilliculty. I will not weary the reader by describing all the lesser channels, inlets, and harbours which were discovered and surveyed, and of which the accompanying map is too small to give an adequate idea. Any one who feels an inter(?st in such matters should obtain the large charts now i)ub]ished, which show the extraordinary shape of the outline of this coast aud its islands: deep channels and inlets, witli more shallow bays and harbours running in every possible direction, sometimes between huge crags, and elsewhere through or into low level land ; the whole forming islands, promontories, and peninsulas of most grotesque shape, and bearing more plainly w ClIAP. Ill, TIIK Cor.P-FKVKn. I a (tl(liiisfiic(' that most infootious of all maladies — a j^old-fevor — had broken out, and liad seized every man, w(tman, and child there and in Victoria. The existence of p»ld on the main- land of IJritish Columlmi, liad heeii i)roved incontestahly ; and everyone whom a lew weeks a;i:o W" liad left eu'jfa^'ed steadily in })ursnit.s from which titey weic reaping a slow sure profit, seemed to have gom' ;j:okl-mad. The story of the discovery of the precious metal in Ih-itish (Joluml)ia should have taken no one by surprise; the only wonder was that years before, its existence in quantities lar it was wtll Iviiowii that no naval or military auxiliaricH were nearer at hand than Esquinialt, it may easily i>e conceived that wo wore not much surjiriscd to receive the ({overnor's messaffo, and wliilo mo steamed ntund to Victoria thought it advisable to itrejiare ourselves for what might pos- siMy l>e a grave encounter with tlie lawless s]>irits of (.alitbrnia. ^lany a suhsequent laugh ha\e the recollections . of that night's work excited. Upon the qiiarter-dec.'k, smail- jirm conqtanies were having annnunition sc^rved out to them; forward, the shij)'s hlacksiiiith was casting l)ullet8 by the score; while our doctor was s})reading out his cold, shining instruments ui)on the ward-room table, and nudcing arrange- ments for the most })ainful surgical operations with that grave, business samj-frold, which is no doubt caused by a benevo- h'ut desire to show the fighting men what is in the opposite scale to honour and glory. Directly the ship anchored outside the harbour, we were lauded and marched into the Fort square, where we were left under anus, while Ca^ttain liicl.ards waited upon the (jiovernor. AVhatever disturbance there had been had now evidently ceased, and his Excellency was found going or gone to bed. However, upon being informed of our arrival, he turned out, thanked and dismissed the troojts, and our evening, begun so fiercely, wound U[) with a su])per in the fort. The fact proved to be that the police, in endeavouring to arrest a drunken riot(u-, had been prevented by some of his companions, by whose aid he had been got qualities dangerous consequences might have ensued. I remend)er one, which, however, loses much of its jjoint to those who are not familiar with the man, and his slow, do- liberate action and utterance. ]Many years ago, when white men were fewer in these regions, and Indians less cowed than they have now become, ]\Ir. Douglas was in command of ono of the Company's trading stations. J lis subordinate oflicer was alarmed upon one occasion by the Indians, who had for some time past showed synqitoms of ins\d)ordination, becoming more violent than usual, and forcing their way in large, umuly numbers into the Fort square, liushing to Mr. ] )ouglas in an excited ttme and manner, he reported that the Indians were in possession of the Fort, and desired to know whether he should turn the men out and man the bastion, &c. He was not a little surprised to hear his senior say in his measured, deliberate fashion of utterance, " Give them a little bread and treacle, Mr. ; give them a little bread and treacle." And indeed the specific completely soothed the excited multitude, which probably no force they could command would have done. Another annecdote of the same kind occurred while we were out there. A blustering Yankee went to the Governor apparently with the notion of bullying him, and began by asking permission for a number of citizens of the United States to settle on some particular spots of laud. They would be required, he was informed, to take the oaths of allegiance. " Well," said he, " but suppose we came there and squatted ?" *' You would be turned off." ('IIAI'. III. (iULD-FKVEU AIlA'rKS. 55 " IJut if .sevonil lumdred ctiinc propuiod to rcsint, wimt would yoii do?" " ^V(^ sliould cut tlicm to niiuco-mcat, Mr. : wo slinuld cut tliom to mincomoiit." l''i()iri tliis time until tlio 8th October, we were engaged iit intervals among the islands of the llaro AnOiijx'lago surveying. On that day ended our outdoor work for JS.")8. 21th Noci'inhcr. — \\'oik over lor the year, we proceeded to Nanainio, where the 'JMumjier' was beached in Commercial C'reek, for tli(^ pur[)ose of repairing the mischiiif she had done herself by runnhig ashore. And a very^ moist, unpleasant business it was. The low water was at night between the hours of D I'.M. and 1 A.M.; it froze all the whih>, and the mud on which the sliip lay was so soft that half the working tinu; was tuktm up in keei>ing the trench, which had to bi' ting under her, open, so that the injured false keel and forefoot could be got at. At last, howevei', the carpenters got their work done, and on the Uth December we returned to Es(piimalt for the winter. On C/hristmas-day the paeket arrived, bringing Oolonel Moody, K.E., the Chief Commissioner of liands and Works; Mrs. 3[oody ; Captain Cosset, K.E., Treasurer of liritish Columbia, and his wife ; and the Itev. B. Criekenei', now chaplain at Yale. The arrival of any officials from Eng- lantl was welcomed as a soil of connecting link with homo, and a practical acknowledgment of the colony's existence. l>y this time the gold-fever had subsided, and something- very like a reaction had set in. I\Iany declared that ]>ritisli Columbia was a bubble that would soon burst, if, indeed, it had not burst already. Victoria now was full of miners, who had come down the Fraser, and were as eager to get back to San Francisco as they had been to leave it in the spring. And although they all spoke well of the bars, brought much goUl with them, and talked confidently of 5(j DIFFICULTY OF TiJANSPOUT. ClIAP. III. : I I ! retui'iiiiig diroctly the winter was over, Victoria was uneasy at their departure, and would not believe in their return. Tlie exodus, indeed, was startling, but not without a cause. To winter at the mines was scarcely suited to the tastes of men the majority of whom, accustomed to the climate of California, where snow is never ir^een, were ill adii}>ted to endure the severity of a British Columbian winter. Such of the miners, principally Canadians and Englishmen, who passed the winter season up the river, suffered severely. The weather, which, with the ordinary comforts of civilization, might be easily borne, told heavily upon men poorly clad rnd housed, and obliged, from the exorbitant price of provisions, to live hardly. Indeed, mor(> than once no little fear was felt lest, from the difficulty of getting supplies up the country to them, the iidand population might be starved outright. At that time, and subse({uently, a great nnndjcr of the Iridians who, in the hunt for gold had neglected to store fish and roots, and otherwise to prepare for the winter's con" .-ig, did die of sheer starvation. The task of transporting provisions to the bars high up the river was, indeed, great. The Ilarrison-Lilloett trail had, it is true, been cut, but as yet it was impassable for mule-trains, so that the oidy way of transporting things from lake to lake was by Indian packing. The snow, too, had blocked up many of the trails, the navigation of the Fraser itself was impeded by ice, so that it cannot be wondered at that such of the miners as had tiie hardihood to pass the winter near their claims wen; paying as much as (Is. a lb. ibr flour, and 3s. for bacon. The old miners of California and Australia, men whose lives had made them impatient of haidship, except in the immediate pursuit of their darling object, and whose rapid gains provoked and ])ernntted tho utmost licence and (.'xtrava- ganee, were little likely to remain up-country, with ihv comforts and vices of Victoria and San Francisco within theii M Chap. III. AmiOACH OF WINTER. 57 reacli. But the people of Victoria did not then understand this ; and when tlicy saw their friends and customers of the summer depart southward, and lieard accounts of the gold- bars being comparatively deserted, it required more foith than tliey possessed to enable them to believe that the tide of immigration would ever roflow, and that it was better for the country that these dubious Californians should leave and be replaced by a more steady and plodding poi)ulation. g y v; ii : \f ir^ t ,i * i! ■ ill t ' I 4 il ' Ml ir ill 58 llUMOUIl OF DlSTUllBANCE AT YALE. Ciui-. iV. ClIArTEU IV. Runidiir of distuibaiico at Yale — 'Pli'injior' iirooccdis lo T.aitplty — CaiKu' journey to Fort Hope — Fort Yale and lliU's liar — Tenuiiiatioii of the dillleulty with ilie Miners — Miners fi:<'"*''"illy - Hxpressea and Express Men — New Westminster — lUturii to \'ietoria — DilHeulties arising from tlie imniigra;ion of Indians f in tiio Nortli. January loth, iy")l). — The ruuiour of another outbreak, not at Victoria, but at Yale, up the Eraser River, arrived to (lislurl), not altogether unpleasantly, the monotony of our winter lii'e in Esquinialt Harbour. Intelligenee had been sent down the river to Victoria that some miners had made a dis- turbance at Yale, and that Colonel jMoody liad, immediately upon being informed of it, started from Langley for the scene of action with the Engineers stationed there, whicli, numbering 25 n)en, had just arrived in tlie colony. The Governor considered it desirable at once to strengthen his hands. Fort Yah^, ninety miles up the Eraser, was one of the stations to which some of those miners who were anxious to remain near their clahns on the upper bars, so as to com- mence work directly the season opened, — or to whom, for sun(h-y delicate private reasons, the delights of San Francisco were not obtainable, — Hocked to pass the winter. Tlie climate at Yale was milder than that of the Upper Eraser, which in- duced a great luimber of the men having claims north of it to come down and pass some months there, while (jtheis working on the bars near Yale were wont to spend their Sundays and holidays in the town. Among them, pre-eminent ibr certain social qualities which had rendered him genendly obnoxious to the laws of whatever country he had favoured with his presence, was a certain Edward IM'Gowan. This intlividual had spent some time in (California, where he had become ClIAP. IV. A WORTHY FKOM SAN FRANCISCO. 50 very notorious, and liad been honoured with the cspeeial enmity of the " Vigilance Committee " of San Francisco. Nor without good cause. He had, I believe, had the misibrtuno to kill several of his comrades in those little personal en- counters which one sees reported so frequently in the American newspapers under the head of " shooting " or " cutting affairs." The act for which the Vigilance Com- mittee of San Francisco doomed him to the gallows Mas killing a man in cold blood in the streets of that city who knew too much of his antecedents. j^I'Gowan of course denied this, and always assc^'ted that he had shot his Ibe in self- defence : but there is little doubt that the view which the Vigilance Committee took of the matter was the correct one. As an instance of the w^orking of universal suilrage, it may be mentioned that this man at one time filled the oHlce of a judge in California ; and quite recently, when, after shooting at a man at Hill's Bar, whom, luckily, he missed, he escaped across the frontier into American territory, he has been elected to the House of Ivepresentatives of one of the border states that lie east of thu liocky jMountains. This worthy has given his adventures to the world in the shape of an auto- biogj'aphy, published some five years since, and written with considerable si)irit. The story told in it of his hairbreadth escape from the clutches of the Vigilance Committee is extremely exciting. Its agents i)ursued him with such rancour that, after with the greatest difliculty he had escaped to a steamer starting for Victoria, he was recognized, fired at, and a bullet sent through the lappel of his coat. That such a man as this was known to be at Hill's Bar, some two miles below Yale, where he had a very rich claim, and to have with him, and under his influence, a strong party of followers bold and lawless as himself, might well give the authorities serious concern. Upon the news, therefore, being sent down of jM'Gowan's having created a disturbance, the (Joveruor requested Capt. Trevost to send a party to aid the II i^ «i 00 'PLUMPER' AT LANG LEY. Chap. IV. ii ! ! \t'i I !j!' '11 Colonel. The ' Plumi^er ' was the only vessel available for this service, and accordingly we embarked a party of marines and blue-jackets, under Lieutenant Gooch, I'roni the ' Satellite,' and started at once for the scene of action. Upon arriving at Langley we found that Colonel ]\Ioody hail taken the ' Enterprise,' the only steamer then on the river capable of going further up it than Langley, and had pushed on to Yale witli twenty-live of the Engineers luidcr the comuianil of Ca[)tain Grant, R.E. As the field-piece we had brought with us must have been parted with had the men been sent on, there being no other way of despatching them except in canoes, it was considered advisable to keeiJ them on board the ' Plumper ' at Langley, and that a messenger should at once follow and overtake Colonel IMoody. This service devolved upon me, and I received orders to proceed up the river with despatches from Captain Ilichards informing the Colonel of the i)resence of the force at Langley, and to bring back his instructions. Mr. Yale, the Hudson Bay Compay's officer at Fort LiMig- ley, undertook to provide a canoe and crew for the journey, and my own preparations were soon made — a blanket, frock and trowsers, a couple of rugs, two or three pipes, ])lenty of tobacco, tea, coffee, some meat and bread, a fr^ ing-pan and saucepan, completing my outfit. At this time canoe-travel- ling was quite new to me, and, familiar as it has since become, 1 quite well remember the curious sensations with which this my first journey of the kind was commenced. It was mid- winter, the snow lay several inches thick upon the ground ; the latest reports from up the river spoke of much ice about and below Fort Hope, so that I was by no means sorry to avail myself of the oft'er of Mr. Lewis, of the Hudson Hay Company, who had accompanied the ' Plumper ' to Langley as pilot, to be my companion. ^Er. Yale had selected a good canoe and nine stout ])addlers, four half-breeds and five Li- dians, and when 1 landid from the shij) a few minutes before eleven tiiey were waiting on the beach, dressed in their • ! I i Chap. IV. CANOE JOURNEY. (;i best blaulvets, with largo streamers of bright red, blue, and yellow ribbons, in which they delight so much, flying from their caps. ]Mr. Yale had previously harangued them, and presented tliem with these streamers by way of impress- ing them with the importance of the service in which they were engaged. Seating ourselves in the canoe as comfort- ably as wo could, away we started, the frail bark flying over the smooth water, and the crew singing at the top of their wild, shrill voices, tlicir parti-coloured decorations streaming in the bitter winter wind. The North American Indians, and, indeed, the Canadijins as well, paddle much mere steadily when they sing. 11iey keep sph^ndid tim(^, and, by way of accompaniment, bring the handle of their paddles shar[)]y against the guuMale of the canoe. In singing their custom is — and the greatest stickler for etiquette among us will find himself outdone by the Indian's respect for whatever habit or fashion may have dictated — for the steersman to sing, the crew taking up the chorus. Altlioagli I have frequently tried to induce one of the others to start a song, with the view of testing the strength of their social habit in this respect, I liave never succeeded unless supported in my request by the steersmaii. This post of honour is usually conferred upon the senior of the party, unless the owner of the canoe happens to form one of the crew, when ho takes the seat by virtu(; of his interest in it. Next in position and importance to the steersman are the pair of paddlers who sit immediately behind the passengers ; then come tlio two forward hands, who have a great deal to do with the management of the canoe in keeping it clear of blocks of floating ice, or the snags which often appear suddenly under its bows, and preventing the current from spinning it round and swamping it, which, but for the keen look-out thoy keep and their dexterity in the use of the paddles, would often happen in such swift and treacherous currents as those of North American rivers. i| i) G2 canop: journey. Chap. IV. ! I l^( ! yi ' w We paddled alonp^ quickly until five o'clock^ when we 8toi:)ped for supper, and, landing, made tea. This meal over, we started again and held on steadily all lu'ght. If the journey by day was strange and somewhat exciting, how much more so did it become when night set in ! Wet, cold, and tired, we rolled ourselves up in the rugs, and in time fell into a broken sleep, lulled by the monotonous rap of the paddles upon the gunwale of the canoe, the rippling sound of the water against its sides, the song of the men now rising loud and shrill, now sinking into a low, drowsy hum. Ever and anon roused by a louder shout from the paddlers in the bow, we started up to find the canoe sweeping by some boat moored to the shore, or a miner's watch-fire, from which an indistinct figui'e would rise, gaze at us wonderingly as we passed howling by, raid sometimes shout to us loudly in reply. We migj)t well startle such of the miners as saw or heard us. Whenever we passed a fire, or a boat draw^n up ashore, or moored to tliv^> trees by the beach, in which minors might be sleeping, the Indians would commence singing at the top of their voices ; and we often saw sleepers start up, in wonder no doubt, who could be travelling on the river at night at such a season, — and in some fear perhaps, for several murders hatl lately been committed, which were attributed rightly or wrongly to Indian agency. And, indeed, as we swei)t by a watch-fire near enough for its glare to light up the dark figures straining at their hard work, and their wild, swarthy foces, with the long, bright libbons streaming behind them, — we might well give a shock to some wearied sleeper roused abruptly from dreams of home, or some rich claim which was to make his fortune, by the wild Indian boat-chant. Most of our journey lay c ose along the shore, where, of course, the current was les.-* rapid and advantage could be taken of the numerous eddies that set in near the banks. Our <'hief man was quite Avell acquainted with the river's navigation, liaving been for years in the llu; ! I 11 m Hi l,-v| I h'l f . I 'Vs m I; f i ( I i! f , CA NARROW ESCAPE. Cn.\r. IV. liiul plenty of time to roacli Hope before iiiglitfall. But ]Mybu-pu-pu was wronj:^: ni«ilit fell while wo were still soiiu? miles below tlio I'ort. About tbro(^ in the afternoou we luul boarded the 'Enterprise' and learnt tliat she liad been three days in the ice, had only jiot out of it indeed the previous niorning, and that Colonel IMoody had not, therefore, been able to reacli Ho[)e until that day. Wo had reason to eon- gratulato ourselves upon our good fortune, as wo had only met some floating ice and been nowhere in very serious danger fi'om it, although once or twice we had narrowly escaped being swamped by floating blocks. But as we proceeded we found the river more and more swollen, the ice thicker and in greater quantities, and despite all the efforts of the crew, darkness set in while we were yet some miles short of our destination. On we pushed, however, and 1 liad fallen asleep, when I was suddenly awakened by a sharp crack almost under my head. The canoe liad struck a rock in crossing a rapid in the river, at a spot now known as Cornisli Bar, but tlien called Murderer's Bar, from a murder that had taken place there, and she was stove in unmistakeably. Thanks to the courage and skill of the elder of tlie crew, we were extricated from our perilous predicament. Leaping on to the rock, against which the full force of the current was driving the canoe, they lifted her off without a moment's hesi- tation, and the other rowers shooting her ashore, we all jumped out and ran her up upon the snow. Of course everything was wet, ourselves included ; but we were too grateful for our narrow escape to heed this trifling inconvenience. Mean- while the men, whose courage and readiness had preserved us, were still upon the rock, the current sweeping by up to their knees and threatening to carry them away. The canoe being hastily repaired and veered down to them by a rope, they too were brought safely ashore. Then arose the question, how were we to be got to Fort Hope that night? It was a serious one, not admitting of a very easy solution. ! ,i(' l 1 Chap. IV FOUT IK) IT,. i)i) To got tho canoe afloat nii^aiii was soon found impossible, as she was split foro aiul alt, and it was ulliiiialcly determined to leave two of tho Indians in eliar^a' of it while the rest of lis tried to nuiko tho trail, whieli was known to })ass near this spot to the Fort. I liave since that nij^dit walked that trail, when it was as ja-etty and pleasant a summer ovcninj^'s stroll as any one would wish to enjoy ; hut on this occasion, with two or three feet of snow upon it, ond three or four feet more ready to receive us on either side if a false step :,as made, that three-milo walk to Hope was very hard work ■while it lasted. It was worse for my companion (Mr. Lewis), for in crossing a river by a fallen tree, which served as a bridge, his foot gave way and he slipi)ed in, drenching his frozen clothes and limbs afresh. Fortunately, however, it was not very deep, and he was fished out, and wo reached the Fort without further accident. Since the time of which I am now writing the old Hudson ]3ay Fort has been pulled down, and a more commodious one erected in its stead. Then tho oflicer in charge of it had only one chamber to serve for both sitting and bed room ; and late at night into this and the presence of Colonel bloody, Captain Grant, Blr. Begbie, and tho Hudson Bay Company's officers, gathered round the fire, wo made our way, looking, I dare say, pitiable objects enough. With tho ready kindness which I never failed to meet with from the Company's oiBcers in British Columbia, ]\Ir. Ogilvy soon equipped both of us in suits of dry clothes, and seated us before a hot supper. In a subsequent cha})ter I shall have occasion to speak more fully of "bars;" but as the word will (jccur freipiently in this book, I may here say that all those places where gold is found and worked on a river's bank are called by that name. This term has become the recognised one, and is not mere miner's slang; all proclamations referring to gold-extracting, &c., beinr>- addressed to the " mininir bars " of such and such a district. F i:. i 'i 6G •MININn-BAHS.' Chap. IV. i 11 ^ ii 1,8, Bars uro formed simply by a deposit of heaps of dotritii.s iit various bends of a river flowing through accumulations of irrupted rock, and between mountains ^^]lose sides have been broken down by former great convulsions. 1'lie rusliing river tears away mass after mass of this rock and gravel, and, carrying on a natural combination of tho "sluicing" and "crushing" processes, deposits the gold, with its ever-accom- panying black metallic sand and a certain quantity of common earth, at intervals along its banks, carrying most of tho lighter sand, &c., out to its mouth, there to form sandbanks and flats. It will be easily undei stood, therefore, that these bars are formed at eveiy i)lace where there is or has been anything to catch the (b-ift as it comes down. But what is somewhat curious is the very different value of the deposit at various bars, or even parts of tho same bar, some being very rich, others very poor, even where they are close toge- ther; and this happens not in the vertical section, which would be to some extent intelligible, but at an equal distance under the surface. One pai-t of a bar may " give out," while another part will be worth working 20 feet deeper. Thus all bars are formed in tho same way, even although the rivers which deposited some of them have long since ceased to flow, or been diverted into other channels, causing what are termed " dry diggings," of which I shall speak here- after. Very rich bars are often covered with sand, mud, &c., for, in some instances, several hundred feet. In California some of the richest diggings no 7 worked are the beds of old rivers, quite dry, often running in very different directions to those of the present streams, and occui-ring from 100 to 300 feet below what is now the surface of the earth. The Commissioner was, when I reported myself, rather surprised at the promptitude with wliich his requisition for troops had been met by the Governor, and perhaps a little embarrassed. His impression now was that the reports which had reached him at Yale and hurried him hither had ('II A r. IV YALE — UIVEU-SCENKI'Y. i)< been greatly cxaprgcM-uted, and from the accounts wliicli had since reached liiin ho. had tlie best reason to believe that the feeling of the mining })opulati(>n at Yah; and elsewhere had been grossly misrepresented. However, he said that he had decided on proceeding next day to Yale with ^Ir. liigliie only, leaving Ua}>tain (Jrant and his party of jjigineers at Hope; and ho desired mo to accompany him, so that if, upon his arrival at Y^ale, the presence of troops should be inund necessary, I might return to l[oj)e with orders t i that elVect ; and it was also determined that ]\Ir. Lewis should take the canoe back to Langley as soon, as it was rejiaired, and tell Captain Itichards of my arrival and detention. Next morning, therefore, we started, and reaclu'd Yale at tliree. The town was perfectly quiet, and the Colonel was received upon his entrance with the most vociferous cheering and every sign of respect and loyalty. Upon the way up we stopped at several of the bars, and made incptiries which satisfied us that the miners were doing very well, although they complained that the snow had for some days past kept them from working. The river-scenery between these two ports was beautiful, even at this season of the year. The distance is only fifteen miles, but the strength of the current is so great that in the winter five or six hours are consumed in the journey, and in the summer — when the stream is swollen by the melting snow — double that time is often taken. The only streams of any size that feed the Fraser for this distance are the Swal-lach-Coom, which flows into it some five miles below Y"ale, and the Que-que-alla, which runs into it two miles above Hope. The Que-que-alla is a considerable stream, dividing into two branches further in, and contains numbers of trout. The mountains on either side are from tliree to four thousand feet high, and are composed almost entirely of plutonic rocks, and at their base is found the " drift " in which the gold is contained. As I have already said, Fort Yale presented the most peace- r2 ;S y'iu IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) /. 1.0 I.I IIIIIM I4£ If 1^ III 2.0 — 6" 1.8 IL25 ■ 1.4 ill 1.6 VI m /: oy^ -> .V' y >^ Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 4^ \ iV \\ O^ > ^^ f^ 68 HILL'S BAR. Chap. IV. ful aspect imaginable. The day after our arrival happening to bo Sunday, Colonel ]\roody performed service in the court- house. It was the first time this had ever happened in Yale, and the thirty or forty miners wlio attended formed a most orderly and attentive congi*egation. After church, the difficulty which had brouglit us here was investigated, and the magistrate at Hill's Bar, the principal bar on this part of the river, lying a mile below Yale, was suspended from his functions. A very few words will suHice to exjjlain it. At Hill's Bar there was a resident magistrate, who was one of the miners, though superior to most of them in posi- tion and acquirements; and at Yale two others — one who was shortly afterwards proved guilty of some rascality and discharged ; the other, an honest man enough, but altogether unfit, from temperament and social position, for the discharge of his duties. These three dignitaries were not upon the best terms with one another, and two of them claimed a certain case and prisoner as belonging each to his own dis- trict, and disputed the right of adjudicating upon them to such a degree that, one having possession of the culprit's body, and refusing to give it up to his colleague, the other went to the length of swearing in special constables to his aid, and removing the prisoner by force of arms to his jurisdiction at Hill's Bar. Among these special constables, and very possibly among the instigators of the squabble, Mr. Edward McGowan figured conspicuously ; and it was the outraged magistrate's report, that this worthy had been prison-breaking in his district, that gave it to the autho- rities at Langley and Victoria so serious an aspect. How- ever, upon investigating the matter, he was found to have acted, if with indiscreet zeal, yet not illegally, and no charge was preferred against him on that account. But the same afternoon, while ("lonel Moody, representing the majesty of the law, was still at Yale, j\[r. jMcGowau outraged it unmis- taKably by committing an unprovoked assault. This, coupled ii . Chap. IV. PRECAUTIONS AGAINST A lUOT. 69 with sundry other suspicious circumstances, caused Colonel Moody to tliink that ]\[cGowan's friends and admirers would, if provoked, break into serious insubordination ; and he at once instructed mo to drop down the river to Hope and Lanujley, and order up tlie Engineers, ^Marines, and blue- jackets left at those places. The utmost precaution was taken about ray journey. Mr. Allard, the Hudson Bay Company's ofllcer at Yale, was instructed to have a small canoe launched unseen by the miners, who, it was thought, might endeavour to stop me, as they no doubt easily could have done. The darkness was waited for, and, the canoo being launched and dropped about half a mile down the river, Mr. Allard came to the house for me, and led me to it along the river's bank. As we drop})ed down the stream I was afraid even to light a pipe lest we should be stop])ed at PI ill's Bar. Absurd as all this now seems — especially as I heard on my return that the miners knew perfectly well of my starting — it was not with- out its use at the time. The promptitude wdth which Captain Grant appeared on the spot with the Engineers at daylight next morning astonished the miners a good deal, and it need not be assumed that, because they apologised and paid their fines, they would have done so equally had coercion not been threatened. Iieaching Hope at half-past eight that niglit, I very much astonished Captain Grant by telling him that he v/as to start for Yale at once, and, landing his men below Hill's Bar on the opposite side of the river, to march thence into Yale. Having given these instructions, I embarked in the canoe again, and about midnight — spinning down the Eraser being a very different matter to struggling up against its current — reached the ' Enterprise,* which was to convey me to Langley, and bring the men there up. Here a slight delay took place, as the steamer could not be got ready to start until day- break: but awav we went the instant dawn broke, and »'. J :ll .»:: ^ i ^1 B I i I |b 70 THE DIFFICULTY ARRi^NGED. Chap. IV. reaclied Langley in the afternoon of tlio following day, where, the * Enterprise ' having wooded, ever}' one was got aboard, and we were strnggling up against tho current by six r.M., reaching Smess River by nine or ten that night, and Cornish IJar by 8-30 the following night. There the 'Enterprise's' further progress was eifectually ban-ed, and, taking a canoe agahi, I made my way to Hope, where I found that further instructions had come from the Colonel to the effect that the blue-jackets were to remain there, and only the Marines to go on to Yale. So things were looking less martial, and I was not surprised, on pushing forward to Yale next morning, to find that the short cam- ])aign was at an end, and the peace, which had hardly been disturbed, restored. j\Ir. McGowan, after enjoying the sensa- tion he had caused, paid the Commissioner a formal visit, and, after making a very gentlemanlike apology for the hasty blow wliicli had disturbed the peace of British Columbia, and entering into an elaborate and, I believe, successful defence of his previous conduct in the squabble of the rival judges, committed himself frankly into the hands of justice. AMiat could be done with such a frank, entertaining rascal ? Justice herself could not press hardly for her dues in such a case. He was fined for the assault, exonerated from all pre- vious misdemeanours, and next day, upon Hill's Bar being visited by Mr. Begbie (the Chief Justice) and myself, he con- ducted us over the diggings, washed some " dirt " to show us the process, and invited us to a collation in his hut, where we drank champagne with some twelve or fifteen of his Cali- fnrnian mining friends. iVud, whatever opinion the Vigilance Committee of San Francisco might entertain of these gentle- men, I, speaking as I found them, can only say that, all things considered, I have rarely lunched with a better-spoken, pleasanter party. The word " miner " to many unacquainted with the gold-fields conveys an impression similar, perliaps, to that of " navvy." But among them may often bo found CuAP. IV. 'EXPRESSES' AND ' EXPRESS MEN.' 71 men who, by birth and education, are well qualified to hold their own in the most civilised community of Europe. Here, for instance, I was entertained in the hut of a man who — by virtue of his rascality, no doubt — had been selected to fill the office of judge among his fellows in California ; while one of my neiglibours had taken his degree at an American University, and may since, for auglit I know, have edited a Greek play and been made a bi.shop, I remember afterwards travelling with two men, who, meeting casually, recognised one another as old schoolfellows and class-men. Neither was in the least suri)rised at the other's condition, although one was a well-to-do surgeon with a very remimerative practice, and the other was an " express " man, penniless, and carrymg letters some 130 or 140 miles for a subsistence. As I have several times mentioned " expresses " and " ex- press-men," I may here explain that all over California and British Columbia letters or parcels are carried with perfect safety, and, all things considered, very cheaply, by means of them. The organisation of some of these companies is most elaborate. The principal one there is Wells Fargo's, which has agencies all over the world. Their office at Victoria is one of the finest buildings there ; and their house in San Fran- cisco is as large as our General Post-office. I have never known a letter sent by them miscarry. The charge for send- ing anywhere in California is only 10 cents (5d.), and so great is my fiiith in them that I would trust anything, in even that most insecure country, in an envelope bearing the stamp of Wells Fargo and Co.'s Express. There are several minoF expresses in different parts of the country — Ballou's Eraser River Express, Jeffray's Express, Freeman's Express — all of which appear to flourish ; and so great is the trust reposed in them, and the speed with whidi they travel, that the miners, as yet, prefer sending their dust by them to the Government escort. A few days later we dropped down the river to Hope* f ; , lit ''€'' Ml m )l;, not tlio least being sufTficiont deptli of water to allow the largest elass of vessels capable of passing the sand-heads at the Fraser mouth to moor alongside of its wliarves. I shall have occasion at a future time to speak at greater length of this and the other settlements upon the Fraser Eiver. Our time for some weeks after tliis was employed in cruising among th(i islands, creelcs, and inlets, upon sur- veying work, which, however valuable to the future settlers and navigators of British Columbia, is but little likely to interest the genei-al reader. March, 1859. — Upon our return to Victoria a diniculty Avhich had been felt for some time, arising from the growing immigration of Northern Indians, who came down from Queen Charlotte Island, Fort Simpson, and the inlets north of Vancouver Island, to see and trade with the white men, had reached such a pitch that it was necessary for the Government to take some steps in the matter. Numbers of these, with their families, came down Johnstone Strait in largo canoes, carrying furs and skins which they expected to sell for fabulous prices. They were scarcely pleasant visitors — not likely to be welcomed by a young community with a newly-formed and small police, as, although quiet enough when sober, they got drunk as often as they had a chance, and then became quite unmanageable. These Indians of the northern coast tribes of British Columbia and Vancouver Island are nmch finer and fiercer men than the Songhies, the tribe living at and in the neigh- bourhood of Victoria, or indeed than any of the southern tribes. They are constantly at war with one another, and were as likely as not to bring their feuds south with them, and could be as little trusted to keep from blows, if they met in Victoria, as +he rival Higldand clans in old times when they came into collision in the streets of Edinburgh. They all travelled armed ; for in their journey to Victoria ;i^ :■«;; 1 iif'"! 74 IMMIGRATION OF INDIANS. Chap. IV. they had to pass the neighbourhooJ of several hostile tribes, by wlioiii they were certain to be attacked if caught un- prepared. One tribe especially, living at Cape Mudge, the soutli point of Vuldez Island, and known as the U-cle-ta, ar ' the Ishmaoiites of the country, whose hands are literally against every man, and every man's against them. There was a great fight betAveen these and the men of a northern tribe coming soutli in 1858, in which a good many wore killed on either side ; and they are always on the look- out for any one passing by their neighbourhood, and of course suffer in their turn whenever they are caught at a disadvan- tage. U} on one occasion, when I was camped for the Sunday in a pleasant little cove, just southward of Point Chatham, in Johnstone's Stra *, it happened that a party of some hundred Haida Indians from Queen Charlotte Island came past on their way to Victoria. On seeing our boats, they came { longside, as Indians always do, and began, after their fashion, chattering and exhibiting tlieir furs and specimens of the gold they had collected in Queen Charlotte Island. In the middle of our talk the canoes which had been keeping watch outside in the strait while the rest were with us raised an alarm. Two small canoes of another tribe, that had been near us all the morning fishing, just then hove in sight again, and imme- diately our companions pulled out and examined the muskets that lay under cover ready to their grasp. Although we were not in sufficient force to interfere between them, I have no doubt whatever that the poor fellows in the canoes, who had slept at our camp the night previously, would have been murdered or taken into slavery but for our presence. Efforts have been made to put down this cruel system of predatory warfare, and occasionally a grand peace-making of the hostile tribes is held, at which eternal friendship is vowed. But it is not long before some fresh depredation is committed, or some solitary Indian is caught by a party of another tribe, and the temptation to murder or take him Chai\ IV. THEIR CHATUCTER AND HARITS. 75 m of ing p is pn is y of hirn prisoner being too strong to bo resisted, war breaks out again. The U-cle-ta are <^reat offenders in tliis way. In the summer of 18(J0 a lesson was administered to them, which, it is to bo hoped, may do them some good. A party of them had at- tacked and robbed some Chinamen, and escaped to their viUage at Cape 3Iudge, which, being stockaded for protection against the other tribes, they no doubt tliought wouhl bo equally efficacious against white men. ll.j\[. gunboat * For- ward ' was sent there to demand restitution ; and, on approach- ing the village, she was fired upon from the stockade with loud shouts of defiance. The gunboat first fired a shell or two over; but, Indian-like, they mistook this leniency for inability to hit them, and coming out in front of the stockade fired several volleys at her, which fortunately, however, fell harmless against her rifle-plates. She then opened fire upon their canoes on the beach, and lastly upon the stockade ; and it was not till several men were killed that they came to terms, and restored the stolen property. One of the most fertile sources of quarrel among all the tribes on this coast with whom I am at all acquainted arises from the intrigues of the Indians with the squaws of neighbouring tribes. Indeed the breach of the Seventh Com- mandment is as fashionable in this out-of-the-way part of the world as it has been at times among European com- munities. A code of reprisals and com})'^'isation has been adopted among them which certainly ha i e merit of sim- plicity. The aggrieved husband whose wife has been misled troubles his head very little about her ; and when she comes back to him, which she does very soon, shows no inclination to visit her offence at all hardly upon her. But although he receives her again, he to a certain extent discards her, and, if he can afford it, adds another wife to his establishment. Should number two go astray, as is very probable, he takes a third wife ; but he keeps the sinners, penitent or not, with Iiim still, and they all live together to all appearance con- m i< 1 W^' i ip ' I' ■'■4 \ I: 76 TIIEIPt CIIARACTEIl AND IIA15ITS. Chap. IV. tentodly onoiip^li. ]\[eanwhilo ho is busy making reprisals upon In's onoiny ; and the result, wlicn tlioy happen to bo chiefs, is probably a war between two tribes, in which the m(}inbers of both join with the greatest interest and zeal. It is in such social habits that the missionaries find their greatest dilliculties when working for the reformation of these peo[tle, more particularly as the white trader generally con- firms by his practice all that the red man is warned against. If nothing else pleads for tho introduction of Englishwomen into liritish Columbia, this fact surely does. In reference to the Indian disregard of marital obligations, I remember a noted Chief, named St. Paul, in the interior of the country — of whom I shall have more to say hereafter — telling mo that the lioman Catholic priests had often remonstrated with him upon his life ; and, among other social reformations that seemed to them desirable, had urged him to go through tho marriage ceremony with his present wife. " To what avail ? " argued St. Paul. "So long as she remains true to me, I will hold to her; but if she fails me — married or not — I shall discard her for another." I have said that it was partly curiosity to see the white man, and still more the hope of making larger sums for their furs than tho Hudson ]3ay Company's agents would give them, that led the Indians to make the journey to Victoria. In the latter hope they were often disappointed ; but it must not, therefore, be inferred that the Indians are bad traders. On the contrary, they are some of the best hands at a bargain or deal I have ever met with ; the squaws, as may be usual with their sex, having the most to say upon the matter, and being the harder to persuade. In buying of Indians, if the squaw be present, it is always advisable to win her favour. The man never concludes a bargain without consulting her ; and I have frequently seen her put a veto upon some commercial arrangement that I had imagined settled, simply because slie happened to be annoyed, and was CiiAP. IV. PLANS Foil CIIECKlNn TFlEIll IMMKIKATION. 77 sulky at something that had transpired while the bnrgain was i)(inent. The Fraser River rises in the Rocky IMountains, a little to the northward of the Athabasca Pass, and in a straight line less than 300 miles from its meeting with the waters of the Pacific in the Gulf of Georgia. From its source it takes a north-westerly direction for about 160 miles, when it is turned southward by a spur of the Rocky Mountains, which runs east and west nearly to Stuart Lake, where it turns northward and assumes the name of the Peak ]Mountains. On the other side of this spur rises the Peace River, which from this point runs northward 130 or 140 miles till it meets the Finlay River, and thence flows eastward through the Rocky Moun- tains. I have called the reader's attention particularly to the Peace River, as it is towards it that the gold is now leading the miners, and in it and its tributaries that many expect the richest diggings will be found. Tliis mountain- spur, as I have said, turns the Fraser sharply round to the south, and it then forces its way in torrents and rapids through the several great parallel valleys that intersect this region in a direction a little east of south for 300 miles, till it reaches Hope, from whence it runs nearly east and west for about 80 miles to its mouth. About 45 miles below the upper turn of the river is Fort St. George. I said about 45 miles, for in this country the positions are as yet very roughly ascertained, and I take this G 2 I I h ill I. I "f t I h h S4 THE FRA8E11 AND NKlGIIliOUinNG COUNTRY. Chap. V. opportunity of saying that all the distances I mention on the river are only approximate. Fort St. George, a Hudson Bay post, is situated on the west bank of the Fraser Jviver at its junction with tlie 8tuart River, which latter flows in a like direction fi-om Stuart Lalce, which is the southern post of a chain of three or four lakes which stretch northward 100 miles to the head- waters of the Bear River, at the foot of the I*eak IMoun- tains. At the head of the upper of these lakes stands Fort Connolly. Lying north-west from the head of Stuart Lake, and divided from it by a narrow ridgo, is Babine Lake, on which there is another Hudson Bay Company's post, and from which rises the Simpson or ]3abine liiver wliich thence flows westerly, running into the sea just above Fort Simpson, and as nearly as possible on our northern boundary on the coast. Forty miles up the Stuart River it is met by a stream coming from Fraser Lake, which is a small lake thirty miles south - ward of Stuart Lake, and on Avhich is situated Fraser Fort. The stream between the Fraser Lake and Stuart River, which I believe has no English name, receives on its course the waters of the Natchuten Lakes and some others. I shall have again to speak of all these lakes and posts, and will now, therefore, pass on without further noticing them. Five-and-forty miles below St. George is the West-road River, of no particular note at this time ; but better known to geographers than the other streams, from the fact of Sir Alexander McKenzie having in the end of the last century gone by it to the coast. Another distance of 45 miles brings us to Fort Alexandria, the head-quarters of the district for the Hudson Bay Com- pany, and better known than the other posts to the miners as being the nearest one to the Quesnelle and Cariboo diggings. What is now called the Cariboo country, so named from a L'nw. V. THE FIJASEK AND NKIUHIJOUKINCI COUNTItY. «.") |dria, Kom- i's as ings. |m a sjJC'cie.s of (leer found there in largo numbers,* lies Ixtween tin* parallels of Alexandria and Fort St. George, and east of the Fraser Kiver. Cariboo Lake is 30 miles north-east of Alexandria, and from that point up to near Fort St. George, in the north, stretch the Gariboo diggings, with their various local names of Williams Creek, Antler Creek, Canon (.-ri.'ek, &e. Nearly in the same latitude as Alexandria, and 80 miles east of it, are the Quesnelle I^akes, where gold was found and worked in considerable quantities in 1859. I'herc^ are two of these lakes, one running southward, the other east for some dijitance, and then north-east until it nearly meets the head- waters of Canoe River. The first of these lakes is estimated by those who have traversed them at 70 miles in length, the latter at 100. Thirty miles below Alexandria, on the oast side of the Fraser, is a stream running in a south-Avesterly direction from several lakes, of which the i>rincipal are Williams Lake, Lac la Hache, Horse Lake, Lac Tranquille, &c. Twenty miles below this again, and consequently 50 from Alex- andria, is the Chilcotin liiver, which runs in a north-east-by- east direction to the lake of the same name, at the south end of which stand the remains of an abandoned Hudson Hay Company's fort. Sixty miles below the mouth of the Chilcotin we come to the Pavilion, situated on the opiwsite or east bank of the river. From this point downwards I am enabled to describe the river from personal experience. At Hoi^e, it assumes the character of a navigable stream, steamers of light draught reaching this point, and even Yale, 15 miles furt)ior up. In June, July, and August, the melting of the snow causes the river to rise so rapidly and makes the current so strong that it requires a very powerful steamer to stem it. It is * The namo of this animal is properly Ctrtbauit', but the country is now always called anil written Cariboo. !*■ ;*.;. \4 I ' ! m i Hi 86 THE PRASER AND NEIGHBOUiaNG COUNTRY. Chap. V. during tliese months that nnmbers of large trees are brought down from its flooded banks, offering a serious obstruction to navigation, many of them ultimately fixing themselves in the stream and becoming " snags." Between Hope and Langley — the latter 30 miles from the river's mouth — there is always a current ranging from four to seven knots ; but at Langley the river becomes a broad, deep, and placid stream, and except during the three summer months (June, July, and August) the influence of the flood-stream is felt there. The current is not more than three knots and the depth of water ten fathoms, so that vessels of any draught may conveniently anchor. Vessels of from eighteen to twenty feet draught may enter the Fraser and proceed as high as Langley, or even a few miles above it, provided they have steam-power. The river is at its lowest stage during the months of January, February, and Blarch. In April the snow com- mences to melt and the river to rise, which it does perhaps two feet in this month at Langley, the flood-stream at New Westminster being still strong enough to swing a ship. In May the waters rise rapidly, and continue to do so till the end of June, when they have reached their highest point. They remain so until the middle of August, with perhaps slight fluctuations. During these six weeks, the banks being overflowed, the meadows at the entrance, and the extensive plains on the banks of the Pitt River above Langley, are covered for several miles, and the strength of the stream becomes four to seven knots, and in some places even more. The ordinary rise of the river at Langley is 14 feet ; but when we were there Mr. Yale, who had been in charge of the post for 30 years without intermission, said he had known it rise 25 feet. Higher up the river, of course, the rise is much greater. In 1859, when I was at Pavilion, the river rose 18 feet in one night. After the middle of August the water begins to subside. > ■ t n n., M I Cum: V. SITK OF NKW WESTMINSTER. 87 and in September tlie stream is not inconveniently strong, Si'ptcmber, October, and November arc the most favourable months for the navigation of the river, as the water is then high enough to enable the steamers to reach Hope, and the current not very strong. Sometimes the steamers get to Hoj)e as late as December, between which month and April the navigation of the river to Hope is almost closed on account of tlie snow and ice and the shallowness of the stream ; but the lightest draught vessels occasionally get up, though with considerable difficulty. At Westminster the freshets raise the level of the river about six feet, but, as the banks are high, no inconvenience is felt. The strength of the stream there is rarely five knots, and in winter from two to three. The rise and fall duo to tidal causes is from eight to ten feet, at the springs, between the Sandheads and l^oint Garry, the entrance of the river proper. At New Westminster it is six feet, and at Langley scarcely perceptible. The Sandheads are five miles south-south-west of l*oint Garry ; the south one uncovers, the north does not. The banks of the Fraser, for some 70 miles from its mouth, are, as I have before said, in places low, and liable to being flooded in the spring and summer. They are, how- ever, very fertile, and a great deal of fine hay grows naturally here, and is sent to Victoria for forage. At New Westminster, the present capital of British Columbia, the bank of the river rises and forms an admirable posi- tion for the future town. ]\Iary Hill, upon which it is proposed some day to plant the citadel which shall defend New Westminster, rises some three or four hundred feet; and the camp, which lies at the distance of a mile east from the town itself, stands upon rising land fifty to a hundred feet above the river. As regards its position, therefore, there is no fault to be found with New West- minster ; but the forest is so dense, and the trees of which 1 ' t ^i. I I ".!" ( !f1 tt . 88 DIFFICULTY OF CLKAHlNCi BUSH. (.'IIAI'. V. it is composed so largo, that itn growth is likely for some years to be very slow. Indeed, had it not been for Colonel ^Moody's determination to make a beginning, and for the labours of the Engineers in (dearing the site of tlieir camp, New Westminster would have made little, if any perceptible progress. As it is, if, as seems most probable, the tide of colonization continues to flow nortliward, and a route to the mines should be discovered up and from the head of one of the numerous inlets north of the Frascr, New Westminster may never repay the labour tliat has already been spent upon it. Of the severity of that labour, no one unac(piainted with the difdculty of clearing bush as it exists in British Columbia can form any accurate concei)tion. J oiling the trees forms but a small part of it. When they are down, they are, of course, with the scanty resources at the settlers' command, too large to be removed, and they have to be sawn and cut up into blocks handy for removal or burning. 'J'hat done, the hardest work yet remains. In forests sucli as these the roots of the giant trees have been spreading underground for ages, forming a close and i)erfect network some eight or ten feet beneath the surftico. To dig this mass of interlaced roots up would defy the strength and patience of ordinary men ; and it is only the wonderful dexterity of the Canadian — and, indeed, of the American generally — in handling his axe, that enables him to enter upon, far less accomi)lish, so difficult a task. Their dexterity is indeed remarkable. I have seen three men — one of whom, by the way, had lost his right arm — fell a tree four feet in diameter in three- quarters of an hour. This may at first sight ai)pear no veiy formidable feat ; but, after a few days' trial, the difllculties of such an undertaking will begin to loom upon the amateur backwoodsman. I remember, upon one occasion, that an officer of IMarines quartered at Westminster, who thought himself, and who really was, no contemptible axeman, under- dertook for a wager to fell a certain tree, some three feet in Chap. V. y for some fur Colonel lul for the lieir canii), perceptible ilio tide of oiite to the I of one o'l estminster >oen wpont :ieqiiainte(l in British •3lling the are down, le settlers' to bo sawn ng. y'hat h as these ilerground eight or interlaced ordinary Canadian idling his iplish, so vuble. I had lost in three- no very cnlties of amateur that an thought I, nnder- 3 feet in I»^i [If !! i> 1 • \) t fi ■ I. 'i I I It rlllliCli M NKW \VL«TMlNtjiiiiriilly, and the troo upright and alinoKt uninjiiK d as bd'oro. At tho oxpiratioii of tho .stil»ulu^■d time anetlicr week was given him, and still tho monarch of I ho wood hcKl Ills head erect. Tho story goes — this was, of course, after tlio bet warf hist — tliat la^ was found one niglit turning out some of his men to take* a sly chop at the tree alter dark. Des[)ito all these drawbacks, however, New Westminster has an nnmistakeably thriving aspect. A church has been built, together with a treasury and a court-house. Its streets boast also of two or three very fair restaurants, some good wharves and stores, and several private houses. In the camp, the Engineers, who for some time lived under canvas, are all housed; and commanding a very beautiful view up the river stands a very conifortabh; house, the residence of their commanding-oflicer, Colonel jMoody. The view of the Fraser from the camp is very pleasing. On the left, over Pitt Lake, rise the beautiful peaks known as the Golden Ears ; to the right of these, the valley of the Fraser can be traced almost as far as Foi't Hope ; while in the foreground, looking over the buildings of tho rising town, level land stretches away into American territory beyond the boundary-line, as far almost as Admiralty Inlet and I'uget Sound. Three miles below tho tow^n of Westminster, a fork of the Fraser, unnavigable except for canoes and boats of light draught, diverties from the main channel and meets the sea some G or 7 miles above the main entrance of the river; and about the same distance above the town the Pitt I fiver flows into the Fraser. This river runs from a lake of the same name. Its banks are low, and a considerable quantity of good land well adapted for agricultural purposes lies on either side. Above, some 15 miles from Westminster, U;J 90 AMEUICAN RIVER-STEAMERS. Chap. V. Langley is reached. Here the steamers from Victoria arc stopped by the sliallowness of the river, and their cargoes, liuinan and material, transferred to the stern-wheel steamers, boats, and canoes which from this point do battle with the swift, nncertain stream. Stern-wheel steamers are peculiarly American. They are propelled by a large wheel protruding beyond the stern, the rudders — for there are generally two or three — being placed between it and the vessel's stern. They are admirably adapted to pass between snags and close to bluffs, where a side-wheel would be knocked away, and are affixed to Hat-bottomed vessels drawing no more than eighteen to twenty-four inches of water. American steamboat travelling has frequently been de- scribed, and its peculiar characteristics and perils are doubtless familiar to most of my readers. There is something very ex- citing about it, certainly ; struggling up the river against the stream, the greatest risk comes from the overcharged boilers giving way ; but tearing down the cm'rent at some twelve or fourteen knots an hour, bumping over shoals, striking against snags, and shooting rapids, is far more animated work. Snags, wliich form the most dangerous impediment to the navigation of rivers like the Fraser, are, as may be known to most of my readers, large trees which, having been carried down the steam to a shallow spot, become firmly embedded there. As a rule, they float down the river heavy end first, so that when they stick the upper part of the trunk opposes the stream and is worn by it to a sharp point, in many cases sufficiently below the surface to be hidden from the steers- man's eye. Going up against the current, therefore, at a comparatively slow pace, the steamer can afford to disregard the snags ; for if she strikes on one, it is easy to shut off the steam and drift back from it. But spinning down the current, it is a very Chap. V. AMERICAN mVER-STEAMERS. 91 serious matter for one of these large unwieldy boats to be- come transfixed upon a well-rooted, obstinate snag. In some spots of the Fraser an awkward snag may equally im- pede the navigation of a steamer up or down the stream. One, known as the Umatilla Snag, from a steamer of that name having first struck upon it, lies in a very nan*ow and rapid bend of the river, at wliich, from the swiftness of the current, the steamer is very liable to be caught and drifted back upon it, after, as she imagined, having safely passed it. Upon one occasion, when I was going up the river in the ' Enterprise,' no less than three times after we had struggled past the snag the strong current caught and swung us broadside across the stream ; and it was only by running the vessel's bow into the muddy bank without a moment's hesitation, and holding her there by the nose, as it were, until she recovered breath to make another effort, that we escaped impalement. There was something very exciting in this struggle between the forces of steam and water. Each time, as we hung by the bank, the engineer might be heard below freshening his fires, and getting up as much steam as the boilers could, or might not, bear for the next effort. The wheel-house in these vessels is situated forward, so that there is almost direct communica- tion between it and the engine-room. By the helm stands the captain. " Ho ! Frank," he hails down the tube, " how much steam have you ? " " So many pounds," is Frank's reply. " Guess you must give her ten pounds more, or we shan't get past that infernal snag." And then more stoking is heard below, and the unpleasiint feeling comes over the listener that the boilers lie just beneath his feet, and that, if anything should happen to them, there can be no doubt about his fate. But, presently, Fiank's voice sounds again. " All ready, Cap'en : can't give her any more ! " The skipper loses no time ; " Stand by, then ! " is liis response. Then, to the men forward, who have made a rope fast to some I f t ,1 *l !. —I 92 AMERICAN IIIVER-STEAMERS. Chap. V. il: stump on tliG bank to keep the boat from dropping off, " Let go ! " and she falls off for a second or two ; her bow cants out a little : " ting ! ting ! ting ! " goes the engine-room bell, the signal for full speed ahead; every timber of the lightly-built vessel trembles. We watch the trees on the bank eagerly to see if she moves ahead. Presently she drops a little, but her head is still kept up ; tl\en tlie stream catches her on one bow. " Htand by witli the trip-pole ! " is heard, and, as she swings round, " Trip I " is shouted from the wheel-house. Into the sAvift shallow water the heavy pole plunges, and perhaps she is brought up by it and run into the bank again ; or, as probably, if the bottom should be hard and rocky, or the water deeper than was thought, away she flies down the river until she is brought up against the bank or across the snag. The perseverance of the Yankee skipper in overcoming these difficulties is certainly remarkable. Upon one occasion, after making four unsuccessful efforts to steam past this " Umatilla Snag," all the men had to be landed and track her past the dangerous Sijot. So further up it was found necessary to resort to the same tedious process, and the united strength of crew and passengers with difiiculty got her over a few hundred yards in tlie space of two hours, " Frank " below in his engine- room cramming on all the steam he could to help lis. Nor is the composure with which the captain meets and remedies an accident less remarkable. A supply of tarred blankets is always kept handy for service, and if a hole is stove in the steamer's bottom, the captain coolly runs her ashore on the nearest convenient shoal, jams as many blankets into the crevice as seem necessary, nails down a few boards over them, and continues his journey composedly. He is often reduced to very serious straits, no doubt, and is not at all particular in the use of means to master a difiiculty. I was assured by a passenger in the ' Enterprise ' to Hope in 1859, that he saw the contents of a cask of bacon turned on to tiie ClIAP. V. THE HARRISON-LILLOETT ROUTE. 03 this fires when additional steam to pass a troublesome rapid was necessary. A little above Langley the Smess River discharges its con- tents into the Fraser, and five or six miles onward it is fed by another stream of similar dimensions, called the Chihvay- hook, on the southern bank of which are the remains of an old fishing-station of the Hudson Bay Company, now unused. Both these rivers flow from hikes bearing their names, and are in the summer-time, when swollen by the snow-freshets from the mountains, deep enough for good-sized boats to navigate them, but in the ^^■int(3r are almost impas- sible even for canoes. Three miles above Chilwayhook River Fargo Bar is reached. This, the spot on the Fraser where gold was first washed, has long since been deserted for the richer diggings higlier up the river. All along this part of the Fraser the banks are low, and sandbanks occur constantly. In the winter the channel is confined to one single swift stream, but in the summer-time, \\ hen the waters are out, the navigator may well be bewildered by the numerous channels which sweep over and between the banks and islands. At a distance of 65 miles from the mouth of the Fraser the Harrison River is reached, up which runs the Harrison- Ijilloett route, which has now become the principal road to the inland settlements. I have spoken of the difliculties which lay in the way of making this route practicable. A glance at the map will show that it consisted of a chain of lakes, some a considerable distance apart, between which a way had to be cut. The existence of this route had been known to tlie officers of the Hudson Bay Company for years ; but no effort had been made to render it available until 1858, wh(3n the rush of gold-seekers to the upper country made the opening of some way such an absolute necessity that the work was at once commenced. The scheme, which was by tbe time of my visit nearly accomplished, was to go by steamei* up the Harrison River and Lake, a distance !;,' ib 94 THE HARRISON-LILLOETT ROUTE. Chai'. V. .^^'*i in b of about 45 miles, to Port Douglas, and from that place to cut a road to Port Lilloett, a station at the south end of the Lilloett Lake, and distant from Douglas some 32 miles. Along this part of the route, or " portage," as these trails are designated, over which material has to be transported from one sheet of water to another, the Lilloett lliver, wliicli runs by or near it, is found of considerable use. Li the summer it is too rapid and dangerous even for canoe navigation ; but in the winter-time, when the waters have subsided, the Indians make their way up it, charging just one-third of the price required by the land-packers. From Lilloett the lake carried them as far as Pemberton, from which place another portage of some 22 miles brought them to the south-west end of Lake Anderson, which is almost connected with Seton, a lake of similar size, from the upper end of which the route to Lilloett, upon the Fraser, is only three or four miles, and comparatively easy. By this trail the dangers of the passage of the Fraser above Yale are avoided, and a distance of some 120 miles of the most perilous travelling saved. At the worst, when everything had to be carried from one piece of water to the other by Indians, with immense labour and at most extravagant rates of charge, it was far preferable to the river route. And now that a broad waggon-road has been laid between Douglas and Lilloett, which by the end of the year will be continued from Pemberton and Anderson, the task of getting up to the mines from the seacoast is rendered comparatively easy. The main engineering difficulties in constructing the Har- rison-Lilloett route lay at its commencement. The Harrison Kiver, which flows for about five miles into the lake of the same name, is in one spot so shallow, that the steamers, when the water is low, have to land their cargoes on the bank, and boats inside the bar re-ship them for Port Douglas. Many plans were suggested to obviate tliis difficulty. Among others it was proposed to cut through the valley from the lake to i" Chap. V. THE HARUISON-LTLI.OETT ROUTE. 95 the Fraser, thus making no use of the Harrison River what- ever. It was at last, however, decided to make a canal through the flat, deepening it and walling it up with large baulks of timber. This task gave Captain frraut and a party of Engineers veiy moist occupation for two summers, and still I believe baflfles their labours. Above the Harrison Eiver the banks of the Fraser rise somewhat, and the stream sweeps more swiftly between clay cliffs, from 10 to 30 feet high. The navigation hero becomes more and more difficult for steamers, and at times, when the river is swollen by the snow-freshets from the hills, they are altogether baffled. Between Hope and Yale they are at present stopped by some rocks, which almost meet in the channel : were these blasted away, steamers might reach the latter place ; but at that point, 85 miles from its mouth, the river, tearing between high, in some cases perpendicular banks, becomes impassable even for canoes. Steamers have occasionally reached Yale, but it is seldom attempted, and still more rarely accomplished. Hope is perhaps the prettiest town on the Fraser. Indeed until Cayoosh, or as it is now called Lilloett, is reached, there is no other settlement that will bear comparison with it. Behind it Ogilvie Peak rises abruptly to a height of 5000 feet : to the right stretches the valley of the Que-que-alla, through which the trail to the new gold districts in the Semilkameen country is cut ; while in the front the river glides, its cliannel divided by a beautiful little green island, the hills upon its opposite bank rising gradually to a considerable height, and forming a charming background to the prospect. High ex- pectations are entertained of Hope by its settlers; and indeed, since the discovery of gold in Eock Creek and the Semilkameen Valley, for both which districts Hope must serve as the emporium, there is a probability tliat they may be, in some degree at least, realised, though at present, all traffic being directed to Cariboo, it is not thriving. ■hk 4.1 (.1 i ' i I' , I 96 THE HARIllSON-LTLLOETT ROUTE. Chap. V. Yale, 15 miles above Foii; Hope, lies at the entrance of the Lower or Little Caiion, and is consequently the head of canoe or boat, as Hope is of steam, navigation. As I have before said, the only obstacle presented to steam-navigation between these two stations lies in some rocks, which almost meet in the channel of the river off Strawberry Island, some six or eight miles below Yale. There would be no great diffi- culty in removing these, and I believe that at one time the Governor did invite tenders for tlie work ; but the scheme was wisely, and I should hope for some time to come, if not finally, given uj). The only benefit which would accrue to the colony would be shifting at a great expense the head of steam-navigation some 15 miles higher up the river, and thereby supplying provisions to the bars between Yale and Lilloett a few cents cheaper than at present. There is nothing calling for any notice in Yale. It was selected by the Hudson Bay Company as a convenient resting-place before commencing the arduous ascent of the Caiions, and where, having come down, they miglit dry the furs and skins tliat had got wet in the passage. It is chiefly useful now as a port for shipping and unloading materials from and to the mines, and is besides enriched by the diggers from Hill's and other bars in its vicinity, who come hither on Sundays and holidays and spend a great deal of their money. The site of the town is itself auriferous, and all the front part of it has been waslied. At Yale my work in reality commenced, and several days were passed discussing with those who were most likely to be well informed upon the subject the best route I should take, and making preparations for it. These were at last com- pleted, and on the afternoon of the 2nd of May we — that is, Dr. Campbell and myself, with a party of nine Indians — were ready to start to ascend the banks of the Frasoi- to Lytton. While talking the matter over, several highly cheering ac- counts of the perils of the way had been volunteered by some Chap. Y. THE IIAURISON-LILLOKTT IIOUTE. 97 jiioney. it part ^g ac- some officials, who had been there recently collecting the licence- fees. They agreed in describing the dangers of the Canons and Jackass Pass, through which our route lay, as really great, and one of them, who had not been up, said quite seriously that he should hesitate to undertake thejourneyfor a thousand pounds. These canons, of which there are two between Yale and Lytton, are narrow passes, through which the river forces its way between steep, in some cases perpendicular, banks, from tlu'ee or four hundred to a thousand feet hiffh. HiJChe journey between Yale and Lytton occupied five days ; but as I think it scarcely possessed sufficient interest to carry the reader over it step by step, it will be better perhaps to give him a general idea of our mode of travelling and the country through which we passed. It had been intended at Yale that I should be supplied with a white man who knew the country, as interpreter ; but upon its being proposed to him, he declined to accompany me, having mining plans of his own, and I was therefore obliged to be content with an Indian who spoke French, not, of course, of the purest. It is by no means uncommon to find natives in the interior of the country possessing a useful knowledge of French. It was the language spoken by far the larger number of the Canadian voyageurs who firet came across the mountains in the service of the Hudson Bay Company, and indeed their trade at their inland posts is mostly carried on in French. An Indian has a great objection to travelling without a com- panion of his own tribe, and consequently after Mr. Ogilvy. the Hudson Bay Company's officer at Fort Hope, had suc- ceeded in obtaining for me the services of Tom (by which name my interpreter was known), I found myself compelled to engage a friend to accompany him. The inconvenience of this arrangement was subsequently felt to be very great ; for Tom falling ill at Fort Kamloops, his fri(nid, who by that time had become valuable to us, persistently declined to leave him, although of course I in my turn refused to pay him if H m 98 EQUIPMENT DESCRIBED. Chap. Y. J II I il i 1 lie remained. A few words here as to our personal equipment may be permitted. For trips such as these I always wore a Bhooting-jacket with as many pockets as possible ; strong corduroy trowsers, tied under the knee after the fasliion of English navvies, to take the drag off it when they are wet ; and an old uniform cap, which I always found had a capital effect upon Indians, inspiring them with an idea of the wearer's exalted position as a " Hyas Tyee," or great chief. Slung over my shoulder I carried an aneroid, which, with a spy-glass, completed my equii)ment. Dr. Campbell carried the gun on this occasion, as I had a chronometer in my pocket, which it was of the greatest importance not to disturb, and I therefore did not shoot. My spare things, packed in a small valise, consisted of a clean flannel shirt, six or eight pairs of socks, a Hudson's Bay capot (a sort of blue frock-coat, made with a hood to it) — upon the cufi's of which a lieutenant's gold lace was put to add to the eifect, and which was worn before the natives upon all particularly important occasions — and a coat and trousers made of blue blanket, which I put on as soon as we camped at night, and in which I always slept. As to provisions, all we ever carried was a side or two of bacon, four or five bags of flour — the quantity depending upon the time that was likely to elapse before fresh stores could be reached — plenty of tea and coffee, and a bottle "of brandy in case of accidents. Our fare upon occasions like this consisted almost exclusively of bacon and dampers, with tea and coffee. Now and then we might be lucky enough to shoot a grouse ; but this happened rarely, as when you are travelling with an object, time cannot be given to going out of the way to hunt up game. Dampers, although well known to colonists in new countries, are, I may explain for the benefit of my English readers, cakes of dough rolled out to the size of a plate, and one or two inches thick. They are cooked either by being baked in the wood-ashes of the fire, or fried iu the pan with bacon fat. Chap. V. EQUIPMKNT DESCRIBED. 90 Besides the tilings ftlready enumerated, I had to carry a sextant and an artificial horizon for getting observations for latitude and longitude. Upon these things being packed, they were found to amount to so considerable a weight and bulk, that nine Indians were required to carry them. These were engaged at two dollars (or 8«. 4d) a-day, which, with their food, was the lowest price at which the Indians would work in those parts. The things were then divided into bundles or packs, as they are called, of as even weight as possible, giving some 50 or 60 lbs. to each man. Arranging these packs is a matter of no little difficulty, for the Indian has a great objection to altering his load after he has once started, so that you have to give the men carrying the ju-o- visions, which grow lighter daily, a heavier load at starting than those who have the canteen or the tent to carry. The majority of these Indian porters have now adopted the dress of Europeans, and turn out for the journey in trowsers and shirt, usually carrying an old coat of some sort, Avhich they are careful to put on upon nearing a town. I have known them to be absurdly particular about tliis ceremony. I once journeyed with half-a-dozen Indians, each one of whom posi- tively carried a suit of clothes in a bundle on his back for more than three weeks, to have the gratification of wearing them at Port Douglas. When we were within a mile or so of the place the party halted, untied their bundles, donned their clothes, and painting their faces bright red, filed into the town with dig- nified gravity. Shoes are the one article of European attire which they do not take kindly to wearing, although they always ask for a pair at starting, which, too, they carry in the pack upon their backs. They either travel barefoot or in mocassins, which are not the pretty things embroidered with beads which one sees in pictures, but a plain piece of deer- skin, laced round the foot with a strip of the same material. I have known occasions when an elk has been killed by me, and within a quarter of an hour after its death all the h2 ■ii Zi n 100 INDIAN GUIDES. Chap. V. ' !l meat has been sluug at their backs and its skin been laced upon their feet. Previous to beginning a journey with Indians, they always look for a present. Indeed it would be difficult, if not impos- sible, to get them to start without this ceremony being gone through. It is not a very serious tax, all that is expected being that you should give them a " cultus-patalatch " (lite- rally, a useless present).* Tobacco is often selected for this purpose, and it is generally advisable, if their squaws are present, to remember them, as this will do more than anything else towards starting them. The Indians, too, are always pleased at having a clay pipe given to each on starting, even if it is never used. Smoking, by the way, has a curious eft'oct upon them. As a rule, although they soon learn to smoke as we do, they begin by inhaling it, swallowing enougli in a few minutes thoroughly to intoxicate them. I 1 ave «ioen one pipe passed from one to tlie other of the party suflioe to bring them all into this condition. The effect does not last long, and in a quarter of an hour they wake up from their drunken dose, looking and no doubt feeling very much the worse for it. The daily routine of life upon the march varies little. About five in the morning we rose and got under way as quickly as possible. I used to indulge in a cup of coffee before starting, but experience soon taught me that it was better to make only t^^^o good meals a-day; between ten o'clock and noon, therefore, we halted for breakfast. For this meal we only unloaded what was absolutely necessary, and did not pitch the tent. A likely spot was selected near a stream and if possible under some shady trees, a fire was lit, and the cooks were soon busy kneading the dampers and boiling the tea. While this was going on — for after the first day we were glad to leave the cooking with the Indians — I used to get ♦ " Cultus-patalatch " means more correctly a present for which nothing is expected In return. m Chap. V. CAMP-LIFE. 101 out my sextant to bo ready for the raeridian altitude of tlie sun at noon, and, if our lialt wore sufficiently early, get a set of A.M. siglits first. By the time I had done this, breakfast was ready, and our appetites being freshened with a six hours' walk, dampers of the consistency of saddle-leather disappeared as if they had been puff-paste. After breakfast we would start again, holding on steadily until evening, when the most convenient camping-place was selected for the night's rest. The Indians in walking are accustomed to stop for some five minutes' rest every half-hour, and this they do with surprising regularity. They generally squat down near a ledge of rock, on which they can rest their burdens without removing them. Tliey carry everything in the same way, viz., with a band over the forehead, tlie pack resting on their shoulder-blades, or a little below. When a halt was called for the night, the Indians divided the labours of camping. The cook, who was sometimes the same throughout the journey, collected small wood, and made the fire ; upon his way he had very likely picked up pieces of charred wood, to assist him in this operation ; another cut larger logs, for use during the night ; the head man pitched our tent, while another gathered a quantity of fir-boughs, on which we should sleep ; others fetched water ; and if any deer- tracks had been seen, or it was thought game might be found in the neighbourhood, one took a musket, and went in search of it, generally, I must say, with little success. As a rule, Indians make very bad shots. They never think of shooting a bird on the wing, and only bring down deer by hiding near a river, to which they know the animals will come at nightfall to water. When these preparations have been effected, and while the dampers are cooking, the Indians are, perhaps, making themselves drunk upon tobacco, which does not, however, at all affect their appetite, or are busy making spoons for their repast. It is not at all uncommon for them, if they have leisure, to spend it in making a set of bark % «\i 102 CAMl'-LIFE. CllAl'. V. .W ■ .ij! f I'' t' h ill Kjtooiis lor supper. This they «lo in a very ingenious unuiner, cutting a strip of bark some tlu'ee or four inches, and splitting it half-way down ; then bending back the slit jiortion at right angles to the other, and tying them with fibres of the same material. It is an o})eration that must be seen to bo tho- roughly understood, but they do it with considerable dexte- rity, and the task of allotting the sjjoons when made among the ]>arty, according to the size of each mouth, leads to very great merriment. Stolid as Indians appear in their villages, upon a cruise of this sort I have always found them in high spirits, and they would discuss the adventures and mishaps of the day's j(jurney with great animation, frequently referring to me to settle any vexed question that might arise. They are veiy quick, too, at noticing any breach of their own code of manners, and are unsparing in their raillery of tlie offender. Gbittony particularly excites their ridicule. I remember on one occasion an individual of my party happened to be a great eater, and the others scarcely gave him any rest what- ever, ex})laining to me that he deseiTed it, being "carqua cushou" (like a pig). Another of their comrades happened to be a very good-looking fellow, and, although I believe he Avas secretly respected for it, he had to endure a great deal of raillery upon his reported successes with the fair sex. Indians appreciate nothing more highly than physical prowess ; and a good warrior or hunter needs no other recommendation to bo admired and envied — the words are synonymous there as elsewhere — by both the men and women of his tribe ; and these qualities my friend the lady-killer possessed in such a marked degree, as to make his companions' railleiy so sub- dued in its tone as to be almost flattering. In travelling with Indians, should the Englishman be anything of a sportsman, he will find it easy to secure the respect of his guides and packers. Shooting a bird or two on the wing, or bringing down a deer running, will raise him high in their estimation ; and he may secure it beyond a doubt by walking (.'nAv. V. CAMP-MFli. io:j them woll ttfV thoir h'^a on tlio tirst clay's joiiruoy. Tlioy will not bear him tho least ill-will, and thoy ruypoet him ovor after. Now that I am on tho subject of Indian manmtrs, I may mention a Strang*' vanity of their young men who aim at j:aiin'ng reputation as great hunters or warriors. This is their fashion of scoring their legs, under the impression that it gives them strength and endurance, ami renders them impervious to cold. The limb is deeply cut in circular fashion, from tho hip to tho knee, making it look not unlike; fish crimped for cooking. These indentations are very d(>ep, and can, of coui-se, only l)0 made gradually, one wound having to heal before another is inflicted, so tiiat a man is generally twenty-five or twenty-six years old before the process is com- pleted. 8omo such fashion is not uncommon among otlu.'r savage tribes. The natives of IMoreton Bay, in Queensland, for instance, are in the habit of cutting their bodies deeply round from the shoulder to the waist, filling up the gash with dirt, so tliat, when it heals, the scar jjrojects like a large ropo or wheal tied round their bodies. I have strayed, howtner, from our camp-fire, although not so far, perhaps, as our thoughts wander sitting by it, with night closing in. While the Indians laugh and talk, or busy themselves mending their garments and patching their mocassins, turning and twisting them about in every direction to find a sound part to serve as a sole to prote(.'t the foot for the next day's journey over the rocky trails, a pipe is smoked, the notes of the day discussed and transfen'od to the field-book, to-moiTow's work talked over, and then to bed — ray companion and myself in the tent, the Indians grouped about the fire. I have said that 1 always slept in a blanket suit, and I recommend this precaution to travellers emphati- cally. However hot the day may have been, the night in British Columbia, even in the months of summer, is always fresh and cold. Cold as it may be, however, the Indian l-J "'< 104 CANONS ON THE UPPER FRASER. Chap. V. m 1 ; 'f i invariaMy strips to sloop, and lies with his blanket wrappetl about liiiii, feot in towards the fire. Even when camped in snow, I have observed they always take off their clothes. Fort Yule is situated on the left bank of the Fraser, at tho entrance to tho Little Canon. Tho banks of the caiion are so perj)endicular that the traveller is obliged to leave the river's side to pass it, unless tho water is very low indeed, when there is a narrow trail at the bottom of the cliff. The trail commonly used, and which is now made into what would bo a very fair mnle-ro.ul, save for tho snow, which blocks it up for seven or eight months of every year, leads up a consider- able height, and through a gorge between two mountains, coming down on tho river again between the two canons, about five or six miles above Yale. As we did not start until after noon, it took us till camping-time to pass tho canon, jind we })itchetl our ^^roL camp when wo came again upon tho river. Next day we i)assed the Upper, or IJig Canon, which is six or eiglit miles long. Before entering we liad ft magnificent view up it, and very striking and wonderful it was. These canons, pronounced by all the miners canyons, aro narrow passes, where the steep, almost perpendicular moun- tains, close in upon the stream. Overhead tho rocks near each other, in some places almost meeting; so that from below a mere irregular thread of light is seen. Tho surface of the river is uneven, and the iiill so great, that hero and there cascades aro formed, over which the stream rolls with fearful rapidity. In the summer time it sometimes tears along at the rate of 20 miles an hour, and when I was thero it was llowiui; 15 or 10, as I ascertained by experiment. In winter, when tho stream is at its lowest, they aro navigable for canoes and boats, but this is always attended with considerable danger, and many lives have been lost in them. IMiners, Inwover, dare anything; and when Coveruor Douglas was at Fort Yak', in l^oW, he .>a\v a man who had actually Chap. V. CANONS ON THE UrPLR FRASER, 105 IS aro ity. I'UtO riuijr ibic crs, I,] as illy conio down through the canons lasliod on to a large log of timber ! As I liave said, the view before entering the Upper Canon is grand. Looking up between the precipitous cliffs, the water is seen rushing through them at fearful si)eed. I hardly know which was more grand, the view from this spot or that further on, as we got well into the canon, in which in some places the trail led up crags so steep that we had to clamber up them with our hands and feet, until we arrived breathless at the top of a projecting ledge, on which wo were glad to halt a few minutes, to draw breath and gaze with wonder on the scene. Before and behind, peak after peak rose 1000 or more feet above r , although we were probably GOO or 800 feet above the river, each more rugged, bold, and grand than the other ; while be- neath, the river, white with foam, whirled alono;, t>iiri;linir and eddying, its wild reverberations continued in endless echoes. Grand as the scene was, watching it, my brain grew dizzy, and I was glad to turn away and continue my journey, fearful lest, if I looked longer, that strange desire which creeps over you to spring into the boiling torrent should become too strong for further resistance. At the present day the trail — which is the name given in the country for any sort of path — is so improved that I believe mules travel by it without ditTiculty when the snow is not on the ground. 1 should be very sorry, therefore, to say anything disheartening to the intending settler, although I may add that anyone who would be dis- couraged by dilliculties such as these had better not visit British Columbia. At the time I speak of thenj were three trails, though they were not entirely separate. The first of these, the J\Iule-trail, was completely blocked up by snow ; it is hardly ever open till June. The others were known as the *' Lower " and " Ujiper " Cafion trails. The lower trail could only be passed when tlie water was low, at which time there is a le*dgo ol' bouldcis along the l)ottom of the clitl", (tver which i V h I . ^»», and continuing again on the other. The difficulty, of course, was to pass the intervening space. This was managed by the Indians thus: they suspended three poles t>y native rope, made of deer-hide and fibre, from the top of the cliff, the inner end of the first and third resting on the trail, and the middle one crossing them on the front of the bluff. Of course there was nothing to lay hold of, and the only way Avas for the traveller to stretch out his arms and clasp the rock as much as jjossible, keeping his face close against it ; if he got dizzy, or made a false step, the pole would, of course, swing away, and he would topple over into the torrent, which rolled hundreds of feet beneath. Iho land-slips in the mountain crevices are also very dangerous. Several times we had to make an ascent of about 200 feet up a land-slip, at an angle of quite 35°, in loose sand, and with nothing to check our downward progress if the sand should slip quicker than we could scramble over. The most dangerous of these, which v,e did not pass till the third day, but which I may as well mention while upon the subject, is called the Jackass Moun- tain. Several people have lost their lives in crossing this, and on one occasion a mule, which some miners tried to get across it, was, I believe, with his driver, precipitated into the river; which circumstance may, perhaps, account for the name of the mountain. This mountain rises abruptly out of the river, and the old trail leads across the face of it. To pass it several land-8li[)s, ,^ this, get the the Chap. V. CANONS ON THE UlTEU FHASK1{. 107 of twenty or thirty yards wide, and at an angle of abont 50°, had to be crossed. To do this the traveller had to make a bolt from the rocky ledge on one side to that on the other ; and if he chanced to get dizzy, or the land slipped away with him, he must inevitably be lost. My companion had here a most merciful escape. He got dizzy, and slii)ped, but had got so far across that he was just able to grasp a root above his head, and thus save his life. I had just crossed, and was watching him, when I saw him turn pale and slip. It was all the work of a second, however, and before I could move he was hanging on to ihe root. The following extract from the Journal of the Bishoj) of Columbia, when travelling over the same ground, will prove that my desciiption is not exaggerated : — " AVe continued the ascent for some distance. Imj)assable, indeed, much of it was for horses and mules, and even for man not without danger. We must have been at the height of 2500 or 3000 feet ; our pathway lay along the edge of a perpendicular fall of such a height, sometimes along beds of loose rock, and most warily must the feet step from stone to stone ; a slip would either precipitate to the abyss below, or cast you among the ocks, where a limb might easily be broken. At other times in the descent the path was nil, the projections for the foot not an inch ; it seemed like the crawling of a fly upon the perpendicular wall. Tliis sort of work lasted for hours. It was, however, so absorbing, and recpiired the utmost constant stretch of attention for self-preservation, that the time passed more rapidly than one would have thought. At the time the critical character of this operation was such that, though near together, no one spoke ; there was a solemnity, as if we realised hanging between life and death. Frequouily we had to crawl upon hands and knees. It was quite wonderful to see the Indians, with their heavy loads, pass along ; one of ours did fall, however, once. We came occasionally to mountain torrents, bringing down th«( h\ . (^ n r,: ! f j \ m l;| l' --• 108 PROPOSED NEW ROUTE. Chap. V. if I :; !!! • 4l!'. I' ft I I t ! '' ml cool water from the snowy height. At one time wo slaked our thiist from the snow itself. At length we had gone over the worst of the Lake Mountain ; the Fraser was again spread out before us; the smoke in the distance pointed out the dwellings upon Boston Bar." Fifteen miles above Yale is Spuzzum, an Indian village, where there is a ferry, and here the mule-trail leads across to the east bank of the river, which from this point runs nearly north and south. The foot trail, the best in winter, keeps along the west bank to Island Bar, which is opposite to Boston Bar, and forty miles above Yale. Boston Bar is at the mouth of the Anderson or Coquiome lliver, and it is to this Bar that the people of Fort Hope wish to have a direct road made, Avhich, I believe, has since been begun, cutting off the small elbow which the river makes, and avoiding Yale md the canons altogether. This will very likely become a valuable route for the Lytton and Thompson Biver country, but not for that which is attracting the greatest notice now — VIZ. the Cariboo. The Anderson Biver is a considerable one, and, after running in a short distance, it divides into two branches, one trending northward till it nearly meets one of the tributaries of Nicola Kiver, and the other running south- ward and almost joining the north branch of the Que-quc-alla coming up from Hope. It is along the banks of these streams that the Hope and Boston Bur trail passes. At Boston Bar the Fraser Valley opens out a little, and between it and Lytton several flats occur, which will some day, no doubt, be converted into pretty little farms. The largest of these, wliich is five miles above Boston Bar, was already fenced in when I was there, and had a hut built on it. These flats, or benches as they are called in this country, are found generally at the bends of the river, and arc raised some fifty or sixty feet above it. They occur much more frequently on the Thompson and Nicola Rivers, and higher up the Fraser, than here. They are all covered i t icli lid •cd ClIAP. V. LYTTON. 109 with the long sweet grass of wliicli cattle and horses are so fond, and whicli has so wonderful an effect in fattening them. I have seen horses on Vancouver Island, where the same grass grows, which have been turned out in the autumn, brought in in April in splendid condition, and as fresh as if they liad been most carefully treated all the time. This is, indeed, the common custom with the island horses, and I remember one of the oldest and best farmers tliere saying tliat the only horses he had ever lost were killed by being taken too much care of, and kept in all the winter. Jackass Mountain is ten or twelve miles above Boston Bar, and when it Avas crossed all dangers were past, and \\g trudged on easily, reaching Lytton two days after we passed Boston Bar, and five days from the time we left Yale. The whole way from Yale to Lytton, whicli is 00 miles, the geological formation of the country is the same, and we passed between steep trappean and granitic mountains 2000 to 3000 feet high, the distance across the river from peak to peak not averaging ijiore than a mile. There is very little land lit for cultivation, except, as I have said, on some of those benches which are found on all the rivers of this country, and which point out tlie higher level their streams once occu- pied, and the subsequent upheaval of the whole country. Lytton, at the time I saw it, consisted of an irregular row of some dozen wooden huts, a drinking saloon, an express office, a large court-house — as yet unfinished — and two little buildings near the river, which had once belonged to the Hudson Bay Company, but which were now inhabited by the district magistrate. This gentleman happened to bo absent from Lytton, but I found his constable, and at once took up my quarters in the courthouse. Next day, thinking we should find it preferable, we pitched our tent without ; but the clouds of dust which swept over Lytton continuously soon made us glad to seek its shelter again. Whilst here I determined, instead of making our way V I > ■ ■ i I f 110 START FOR KAM LOOPS. Chap. V. 181(11 It' i! direct to Lilloett, to diverge by the way of the Nicola River and Ijakc to Fort Kamloops or Thompson, situate some 90 miles np the Thompson River. Seven of our Indian escort, when they heard of my purpose, refused to accompany us to Kamloops, unless I would promise them to return from that place direct — a programme I had no intention of following. Tom and his friend, however, stuck to us ; and I found an Indian who owned two horses, and who undertook the transport of our packages, by this time, of course, considerably reduced in weiglit and bulk. As it proved, we were most fortunate in this arrangement, for without horses we should have found it impossible to ford the Nicola, and must inevitably have been turned back on reaching that river. Pleased enough to leave the dust and wind of Lytton, our little party started for Kamloops. i i;! I i I' Chap. VI. ASPECT OF TIIK COUNTRY. Ill CHAPTER VI. Joiu'iicy continued — Kamloops — Life of tho Hudson Bay Employes — Indian Chief, St. Paul — Pavilion — The Hurrison-Lilloett Route. FoTi about nine miles our course lay along the south bank of the Thompson, close by the water's edge. The scenery of the river resembled that of such parts of the Fraser Avhere the trail lay along its shore — a shelving bank of large boulders, covered in tho summer with water. Coming to the Nicowameen River, — where, it is said, gold was first found in British Columbia by an Indian who, stooping to drink, saw a rich nugget glittering in the water, which he carried to IMr. McLean, the officer in charge of Fort Kamloops, — we turned off, and, crossing a mountain on our right, found ourselves in a long, narrow valley, in which I saw the first land I had as yet found that seemed unmistakeably fit for agricultural purposes. From this time all the way to Kamloops the aspect of the country had completely changed from that of the Fraser below Lytton ; and we passed through a succession of valleys sufficiently clear of timber to make settling easy, yet with enough for building purposes, well watered, and covered with a long, sweet grass. There are no prairies in British Columbia, but it consists of what is called rolling country — that is, long valleys from one to three or four miles wide, divided one from the other by mountain ridges. Through the centre of these runs usually a river, and in some cases may be seen a chain of smaU lakes. In summer, when the water is high, streams and lakes meet, and the valleys become sheets of water, dotted with large islands. At such a time it is very curious to see the same river flowing diverse I.M \0 il 112 ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY. Chap. VI. li' ■ |; 111 lllll*" I ii ,! ,t, IN ji ways, as you may at almost all the watersheds or turning- points of the water. After passing along the first of these valleys, in which many trees had been felled, and two log- huts erected, most probably for the sake of claiming pre-emption, wo passed through a gorge of the mountains, and came out in view of the Nicola lliver, flowing some (500 or 800 feet below us. The view from this spot was one of the most lovely I ever saw in British Columbia. It was a fine, clear May day. The sun shone brightly, giving a warmth and freshness to the hill-side, which sloped to tho water's edge, not in craggy, precipitous masses like those of the canons on the Fraser River, but clothed with long, soft grass, and bright with the numberless wild flowers which grow so luxuriantly in this country. Unlike them, too, instead of terminating abruptly at tho water's edge, they sloped do\yn to it in plateaux a mile or so in breadth, terminating some- times in steep, perpendicular banks, but as often sweejjing down gradually to a neutral ground of reeds and swamp, yet always vjung with the hill-sides in fertility and luxuriance. Between these banks tho Nicola coursed with great rapidity, leaping over the many rocks which check its progress, and sweeping round the numerous small islets that dot its surface. It is very difficult to impress the reader with the beauty of the view on which we stood gazing, unwilling to tear ourselves from it. As yet we had seen nothing at all equal to it in British Columbia. The shores of the coast are lined with dense, almost impenetrable forests, while the Fraser cuts its way through steep and rugged mountains. It is true that between Forts Langley and Hope there is some level land on either side of the river, but even there you see a mountain barrier rise in the near horizon, and feel sure that it must be scaled before rich fertile land like this can be reached. Ij Chap. VI. NICOLA RIVER. 113 the ig to tall joast the ains. e is you lire can It was about three in the afternoon when wo reached tlio Nicohx River. Coming to where it shouhl be forded, we found that we had to pay a heavy price for the sunny weather that had seemed so welcome, but which had melted so much snow among the mountains, as to swell the river and make it nearly impassable. However, it must be crossed somehow ; and now we found the advantage of having horses with us. Remov- ing their loads, two of the Indians swam tlie horses across. So swift was the swollen stream, that, although it could not have been more than 100 yards wide, they were swept at least half-a-mile down the river before they could gain a footing on the opposite shore. Next we crossed, only getting over one at a time, as the other had to swim the horses back ; and lastly the baggage was taken over. It was rather a lengthy process, and by the time it was all done night was setting in, and it was time to camp. Next morning we followed the course of the Nicola River, until, during the second day, we came up with the Lake. Here for the first time I saw mounted Indians of the interior. They were as yet uncontamiuated by intercourse with white men : indeed all they had ever seen were the people of the Hudson Bay Company stationed at Fort Kamloops. When we camped ovcnight, I had no idea that we were in the close proximity of Indians, and upon waking in the morning I was not a little surprised to see an old Indian on horseback looking into the tent. Tom at once introduced him as No- as-is-ticun, the chief of the Skowtous tribe, and a connection of his own, and very soon a large number came riding up to our encampment, all fairly mounted on light yet fleet horses. My new friend with the long name was very friendly and sent one of his men to his hut for a grouse, which he pre- sented to us for breakfast, and which Dr. Campbell and I ate with no little relish. It was one of the willow-grouse, which is found commonly both in Vancouver Island and on the mainland. li iti % rf 1^ 4 r 3 r<1 I f ^ i> III I- I I 'u 114 NICOLA LAKE. Chap. VL Coming out of the tent — (it was quite dark ■when we had camped the night before) — I found that we were upon rising ground, with a river flowing beneath us, and that beyond a wide valley of undulating land extended for several miles, M'hich was dotted with Indian villages, the smoke of whose fires was rising into the clear air, while over it we could see Indian hovsemen galloping about in various directions. The old chief informed me that these were the homes of his tribe, the Skowtous, and that his domain extended as far as the Thompson River, which divided him from the Shuswap Indians. Upon my telling him whither I was going, the chief at once expressed a desire to accompany us through his territoiy, and offered us horses for the journey. These, for several reasons, we declined ; but we accepted the offer of his company, and in a little while he joined us with a staff of eight or ten of his tribe, all well mounted. Passing through another fine valley about ten o'clock, we came to the Nicola Lake. This lake is about fourteen miles long by one to two wide, and lies nearly north and south. Its Indian name is " Smee-hiiat- loo," but it has long been called the Nicola, after an old chief of the Shuswap Indians. Its banks are low, except in one place on the west side, where a perpendicular granitic cliff barred our progress and compelled the horsemen of our party to take a considerable detom* to avoid it. Upon the west side of the lake the mountains approach it closely ; but on the east, northward of a mountain about 2000 feet high, called by the natives Wha-hat-challoo (Otter) Mountain, two rivers run into it from large valleys, in which there appears to be, and according to my native friend there is, some very good land. These rivers are called respectively M'Donald and Bodinion. A small chain of lakes or ponds stretches eastward from the Nicola in an almost unbroken line to the Thompson River. Passing these, we ascended the side of a mountain called by the natives Skye-ta-ken, upon the summit of which Chap. VI. KAMLOOrS. 115 we were, as nearly as I could estimate, 3G00 feet above the sea. The view from hence was very extensive and beautiful, ranging as fur as the Semilkamecn Valley and the Shuswap Lake, and disclosing a fine tract of grass land which will some day become a noble grazing country. Descend- ing the mountain-side, we crossed a su(!cession of low grassy hills, coming in time to the Thompson llivor. It was about 8 o'clock in the morning when we came here, and found ourselves in sight of Kamloops. The view from where we stood was very beautiful. A hundred feet below us the Thompson, some 300 yards in width, flowed leisurely past us. Opposite, running directly towards us and meeting the larger river nearly at right angles, was the North River, at its junction with the Thompson wider even than that stream ; and between them stretched a wide delta or alluvial plain, which was continued some eight or ten miles until the mountains closed in upon the river so nearly as only just to leave a narrow pathway by the water's edge. At this fork and on the west side stood Fort Kamloops, enclosed within pickets ; and opposite it was the village of the Shuswap Indians. Both the plain and mountains were covered with grass and early spring wild flowers. We descended to the river-side, and our Indian companions shouted until a canoe was sent across, in which we cm- barked and paddled over to the Fort. Kamloops differed in no respect from other forts of the Hudson Bay Company that I had seen — being a mere stockade enclosing six or eiglit buildings, with a gateway at each end. Introducing ourselves to Mr. M'Lean, the Company's officer in charge of the fort and district, we were most cordially received, and, with the hospitality common to these gentlemen, invited to stay in his quarters for the few days we must remain here. At this time the only other oflicer at the Fort was Mr. Manson. With them, however, was staying a lloman Catholic priest, who, having got into some trouble with the i2 .a .7 • \ H f fj I^i I II'! i ''iji IIG HUDSON BAY COMrANY'S EMPLOYES. Chap. VI. Indians of the Okanagnn country, had thought it pnident to leave that district and take up his abode for a time at Kamh)ops. The life which tlieso gentlemen of the great Fur Company lead at their inland stations must necessarily be somewhat dull and uneventful ; but tliey have their ^vives and families with them, and grow, I believe, so attached to this mode of existence as rarely to care to exchango it for another. As it happened we visited them just as tlic one stirring event of the season was expected — tlie arrival of the great Fur Brigade from the north. It may be well if I pause here to describe, in as few words as possible, the position of the Hudson I>ay Company in these districts, of which until lately, they formed the solo white population. Those who have seen the " fur traders " only at their seaports, can form but a very inadequate idea of the men of the inland stations. Inland you find men who, having gone from England, or more frequently Scotland, as boys of fourteen or sixteen, have lived ever since in the wilds, never seeing any of their white fellow-creatures, but the two or three stationed Avith them, ex- cept when tlie annual " Fur Brigade " called at their posts. They are almost all married and have large families, their wives being generally half-breed children of the older servants of the Company. Marriage has always been encouraged amongst them to the utmost, as it effectually attaclies a man to the country, and tends to prevent any glaring immoralities among the subordinates, which if not checked would soon lead to an unsafe familiarity with the neighbouring Indians, and render the maintenance of tlie post very difficult, if not impossible. In the Company's service there are three grades of officers —the "Clerk," "Chief Trader," and "Chief Factor." The clerk is paid a regular salary of 100/. to 150/. per annum, and he has his mess found him, which is estin ated by the Com- pany to be worth another 100/. a-year. In this grade they •.VI. nt to to at iFur y be ivives 3(1 to it for ^ one )f the words ny in 5 solo (lers " 3 idea nd, or , have whito m, ex- posts, their vaiits raged I man ilities ilead I, and f not ficers The and Com- they i If: ' ^4 .i ' m4 i \ m i;l.orK-llnl SK I'MliT c il' IHHi^dX DAY U i.M 1 ■ A N Y , Pmlo 117 hFi CuAP, VI. HUDSON BAY COMPANY'S EMPLOYES. 117 are usually kept 14 or 15 years, though interest with the directors or great efficiency sometimes enables a man to get his promotion in 10 or 12 years. He then becomes a chief trader, and, instead of being a salaried servant, is a shareholder, his pay varying with the value of the year's furs from 400/. to as high as 700/. or 800/. The mode in which he re- ceives (li.s ;•>■ ire is somewhat peculiar. The accomits of the Company are made up at intervals of four years, and no pay is given to the higher servants — i. e. the shareholders — until this is done. Thus a man who is mado a chief trader in 18G2, will get no pay till 18GG, when the dividends for the former year are declared. Of course in the long run this is the same thing; as, if a man retires in 1802, he keeps on his full pay till 18G0, when he is paid his dividend for 1SG2 ; and no real inconvenience is felt, as the Company always lends whatever moneys are required, within certain limits, and in- deed prefers its officers being in its debt. The posts of chief factors are filled up as vacancies occur, the number being limited. A man is generally a chief trader for 15 to 20 years before he reaches this — the highest step in the service** The chief factoi-'s share varies from 800/. to 1500/. per annum. Every station is, as a rule, in charge of a chief trader, chief factors having the control of several posts, or a district, as it is called, or being stationed at head-quarters. As all Hudson Bay posts are much alike, I will here describe them generally. They^are built usually in the form of a square, or nearly so, of about 100 yards. This space is picketed in with logs of timber, driven into the ground, and rising 15 to 20 feet above it. In two of the corners is usually reared a wooden bastion, sufficiently high to enable the garrison to see a considerable distance over the country. In the gallery of the bastion five or six small guns — six or twelve pounders — are mounted, covered in, and used w ith regular ports like those of a ship ; while the ground-floor serves for the magazine. Inside the MJ m '■ « ll''- 'i\ 1 \ 1 1 \ 1 1 I ! W ' 9 w \ \ fl'i: \ I i iff 1. 1 F m ■itt* -^i^ 1 1 ' a. 11 i'< r 1 . ' I f 1 1 ffi iji 1 til I 118 VISIT TO AN INDIAN C :1EF. Chap. VI. pickets are six or eight houses: one containing the mess- room for the officers at the post, and their dwelling-house, where the number of them is small ; two or three others — the number of course depending on the strength of the post, — which seldom exceeds a dozen men — being devoted to the trappers, voyageurs, &c. Another serves for the Indian trading-store, and one for the furs, which, as will be hereafter explained, remain in store at the inland posts during the greater part of the year. Some of these forts have seen some hard fighting, and have often been as gallantly defended against Indians and the rival traders of the old North-Western Company as military posts for the defence of which great glory has been gained. The day after our arrival at Kamloops we went across North River to the Indian village, to pay a visit to the chief of the Shuswap tribe, who was described to us as being somewhat of a notability. Here was the site of the old fort of the Com- pany, which some twelve years back, after the murder of Mr. Black, the officer in charge of it, by the Indians, had been removed by his successor to the opposite side of the river. No doubt the old site was preferable to the new, which is subject to the summer floods. Only the year before our visit, indeed, all the floors had been started by the water, and the occupants of the fort buildings had to move about in canoes. We found the Shuswap chief located in a good substantial hut. The Indian constructs but two kinds of abodes anywhere : one a permanent hut, in his village ; the other a temporary one, to shelter himself when he is moving about from place to place, fishing or collecting clams. In their permanent houses the architectural peculiarity that strikes the observer with most surprise is the solidity and size of the cross-beams. They erect ten or twelve upright supports, according to the size of the hut, the tops of which are notched to receive the beams ; and it is a great object with them to have as large a beam as V i '0 Chap. VI. VISIT TO AN INDIAN CHIEF. 119 possible, because, as it must be raised by sheer strength and numbers, its size is supposed to testify to the number and cordiality of the builders' friends. The ends of these huge beams — some of those I have seen being 40 to 50 feet long, by two to three feet in diameter — are usually ornamented with the head of some fish or animal, which, projecting beyond the wall, shows the crest or distinguishing mark of the house. The sides of the building are formed of large planks, wonderfully smooth considering that the Indians use no plane, and until lately, indeed, had no axes. The interior of the hut is divided into compartments, and, upon entering, you may see a fire burning in each, with six or eight individuals huddled about it, their dusky forms scarcely distinguishable in the cloud of white blinding smoke, which has no other outlet than the door, or sometimes a hole in the roof. Their tem- porary hut is constructed lightly of thin poles covered with mats ; but these, as I have said, are generally used only in the summer, and upon their fishing-expeditions and travels. It is not, however, unusual for the Indian to have a permanent residence in two or three villages, in which case he usually makes one set of planks useful for all, carrying them with him from place to place, and leaving only the upright posts and beams stationary. They have been known, however, from some superstitious reason, or because of sickness breaking out in a place, to leave their villages with everything standing, and never to return to them. The building into which we were introduced was more like a regular wooden house than an Indian hut. In the centre room, lying at length upon a mattrass stretched upon the floor, was the chief of the Shuswap Indians. His face was a very fine one, although sickness and pain had worn it away terribly. His eyes were black, piercing, and restless; his clieek-bones high, and the lips, naturally thin and close, had that white, compressed look which tells so surely of constant suffering. Such was St. Paul, as the Hudson Bay Company ii f' if 1^1 ! . ^ I m. n ,: i' f m in- lit 1*^! [!!-i^ m\ I ' ii if lit Mill,,, !M #:"!;|:' i'!-:lli 120 VISIT TO AN INDIAN CHIEF. Chap. VI. called him, or Jean Baptiste Lolo, as he had been named by the Koman Catholic priests who were in this district many years before. Behind him stood his wife, and presently he sum- moned two handsome-looking Indian girls, whom he intro- duced to us as his daughters. St. Paul received us lying upon his mattrass, and apologized in French for not having risen at our entrance. He asked Mr. M'Lean to explain that he was a cripple. ]\Iany years back it appeared St. Paid became convinced there was something wrong with his knee. Having no faith in the medicine-men of his tribe, and there being no white doctor near, the poor savage actually com- menced cutting a way to the bone, under the impression that it needed cleansing. In time, at the cost of course of great personal suifering, he succeeded in boring a hole through the bone, which he keeps open by constantly syringing water through it. Mr. M'ljcan described him as a man of very determined character, who had been ujxin many occasions most useful to him and his predecessors at the fort. Although obliged to lie in his bed sometimes for days together, his sway over his tribe is perfect, and, weak as he is, he rules them more by fear than love. Upon my remarking casually that I wondered he was not sometimes afraid of some or other of his people taking advantage of his comimratively helpless condition, he heard me with a grim smile, and for answer turned back his pillow, Avhere a loaded gun and a naked sword lay ready to his hand. Upon our risiug to leave Mr. M'Lean whispered that our host would take it ill if he were not asked to accompany us ; and this being done, to my surprise St. Paul at once assented. Being assisted to rise, he hobbled to the door on crutches, and, having been with considerable difficulty got into the saddle, rode about all the day with us. The mountain up which Mr. M'Lean guided us was one of two standing side by side opposite the fort, and about a mile from it. Its companion had been named Koches des Femmes, all Chap. VI. BANDS OF HORSES. 121 from the fact that, in summer, many Indian women were to be seen scattered about its sides gathering berries and moss. From its summit, at a height of some 1500 feet, we had a very fine view of the hind along the banks of the Thompson and North Kivers. It appeared to be very good, and in this opinion we were confirmed by Mr. M'Lean, who further informed us that the land at the head of the Thompson Kiver, and southward of that point to the Semilkameen Valley, was equally fertile and valuable. Descending the mountain, which we christened Mount St. Paul, in honour of the old chief, we lunched with him, returning to the fort for a tea- dinner. Tea is a beverage drunk usually at this and other meals. Indeed, Mr. M'Lean informed us that he took no- thing else. Nor had total abstinence disagreed with him. A finer or more handsome man I think I never saw, with long beard and moustaches, and hair hanging in ringlets down his shoulders. The Indians, we heard, had given him the sobriquet of the Bearded Chief. On the following day we went out to see the bands of horses driven in, and those that were past work selected for food. There were some two or three hundred horses, of all sorts and ages, at the station. Just outside the Fort were two pens, or corrals as they called them, and into these the horses were driven. A few colts were chosen for breaking in, and then the old mares, whose breeding-time was past, were selected and — for it was upon liorse-flesh principally that the Fort people lived — driven out to be killed, skiimed, and salted down. It was curious to note the close discipline in which the stud-horses of each band kept their mares. T'here are gene- rally three studs in each band, and while they were in the corral they might ho seen galloping about, administering a kick here and a bite there. For a few minutes, perhaps, one Avould stand still and look about liim, then suddenly, without the least perceptible cause or provocation, he would make a rush at some unfortunate mare, and bite or kick her severely. ;li^ \ m \ f' If » r] 122 ACCOMPANIED BY ST. TAUL. Chap. VI. :., ii Sell* i' : The mountain-sides in the neighbourhood of Kamloops are covered witli a bright yellow moss, called by the Indians Quillmarcar. It is much used by them as a dye, and when boiled gives them that yellow which is so familiar to those who have travelled among them in their dog-hair mats and other native Avork. There is also a kind of lichen which grows here, called by them " Whyelkine," and which is one of their most important articles of food.* In its natural state it somewhat resembles horse-hair, and being boiled it is pressed into cakes, three or four inches thick, looking not unlike our gingerbread. Its taste is very earthy and rather bitter. Our companion, St. Paul, gave us this, which they call " Wheela," with milk, upon our return to his hut, but two or three mouthfuls were all we cared to take. While at the Fort I learned that the rivers between Kamloops and Pavilion on the Fraser, for which place I had determined to start, were likely to be so swollen with the late thaw that we should not be able to cross them without horses. Accordingly it became necessary to make arrange- ments for mounting our party. We discovered that the best way of effecting this would be to seek the aid of St. Paul, who happened to be the possessor of a score or more horses. Willing as Mr. M'Lean was to render us every assistance, he could himself spare us no horses, a message having been received from the officer in charge of the Fur Brigade, which was expected to arrive daily, saying that he should require all they could supply him with. Terms were accordingly made with St. Paul, and upon their completion, to my surprise, the old chief said that he should like to accompany us. We were very glad of this, if for two reasons only. In the first place, Tom, my interpreter, had fallen ill, and, as I have before said, his friend steadily refused to leave him, so that we were without a guide, and the information we had lately received convinced us that, without the aid of some * L. jubatiis. fi ^ m •i ;i Chap. VI. COURSE OF THOMPSON RIVER. 123 one well acquainted with the forda, it would be difficult, if not altogether impossible, to cross the rivers that lay in our path. Secondly, St. Paul possessed considerable influence with the Indian tribes through which we had to pass, and we might feel pretty sure that he would, if he lived througli the journey, conduct us safely to its end. On the morning of the 14th ]May, then, into the Fort rode St. Paul, with an escoi-t of eight men mounted, and with led horses for Dr. Campbell and myself. Four of these men were to have charge of our packages ; the rest formed his own body- giiards, two being the old chief's sons. We were soon ready to start, and, following the course of the Thompson for about twelve miles, came to the river. Tranquille. Here Mr. M'Lean, who had ridden so far, was compelled to part company with us, regretting that the hourly expected arrival of the Fur Brigade prevented his leaving Kamloops for any length of time. The plains that lay along the "course of the Thompson seemed rather light and sandy, but in spots good land was observable. Crossing the Tranquille close to its mouth without any difficulty, the water being little above our horses* knees, and turning to the right, we mounted a somewhat steep gorge leading to a long, narrow valley running nearly parallel to the ITiompson River, but quite out of sight of it. Emerging from this pass, we descended to Lake Kamloops, along the side of which we held until night, camping at a spot called the Coppermine, where the Indians said they had found perfectly pure specimens of that metal. We made a very careful examination of the place, and although there were unmistakeable signs of the pre- sence of copper, we saw nothing to cause us to doubt that the Indian's story was not, as usual, very much over- charged. At this spot the trail by which the Fur Brigade would travel to Fort Kamloops met that along which we were « $ t!! m . ij 1 Hi 1 1&3 W:^Ji H ■ ,! ! ■I , 'f SI 124 THE FUR BRIGADE. Chap. VI. liil u I 5^ '*t i:|i * i- 11 I If 't journeying, and St. Paul was very anxious that we should dejwsit a note for the officer in command of it, expressive of his, the chief's, good wishes. I was rather puzzled what to say, hut St. Paul was so urgent that I should, as he expressed it, " Ban jour Mr. Peter," that I scrawled a few hurried lines ; and when a year later in Victoria I chanced to meet Mr. Peter Ogdon, the officer who had been in charge of the Brigade, I learnt that upon his arrival at Coppermine he had found my note. It was not without regi-et that I missed seeing the Fur Brigade. It is one of those old institutions of this wild and beautiful country, which must give way before the approach of civilisation. The time Mill come — soon, perhaps — when such a sight as a train of some 200 horses, laden with fur-packages, winding their way through the rough mountain-passes of British Columbia, will be unfamiliar as that of a canoe upon its rivers. No doubt the change will be for the better, but it is sometimes hard to believe it. Of course it is much more practical to ascend the Fraser in a river steamboat than to make the journey in an Indian canoe ; and perhaps, taking the chances of an explosion into con- sideration, equally exciting; but it will be long before I shoiUd prefer the former method of locomotion to the latter when the weather is fine. With all its many inconveniences, there is something marvellously pleasant in canoe travelling, with its tranquil, gliding motion, the regular, splashless dip, dip of the paddles, the wild chant of the Indian crew, or better still the songs of the Canadian yoyageurs, keeping time to the pleasant chorus of " Ma belle Eosa " or " Le beau Soldat." Miss the Fur Brigade we did, liowev ^r, and next morning we pursued oiu* way along the shore of the Kamloops Lake. The scenery here was very pretty, and the lake was, we found, perfectly navigable for steamers. Indeed it has since been proposed to start steamers here, and run them past Kamloops for some miles up the North and Thompson Rivers, from the latter of which a small porttige would connect them with mm Chap. VI. BUONAPARTE RIVER. 125 another line of steamers to be stationed on the Okanagan Lakes. About half-way along the north side of Kaniloops Lake the trail passes round a very stoop and dangerous cliff, over- hanging the deep water below. A ledge barely wide enough to give the horses footing is the only pathway. This j)ass, known as the IMauvais lloclier, was one of the most un- pleasant places I had ever ridden over ; and I was not at all surprised to hear that several horses had, with their riders, been precipitated into the lake below. St. Paul told us that he had discovered a way along a narrow gorge in the . r, by which this might be avoided, but that it required some labour to clear it before it could be used. There is also a trail upon the other side of the lake by which the passage of the Mauvais llocher might be avoided; and a horse-ferry had just been established at its west end, which was very generally used by the American packers from Walla-Walla. But travelling northward as we wore, had we followed this trail we should have had to cross the Thompson twice. A little below Shuswap Lake the Buonaparte River joins the Thompson. This river is said to have its rise in Loon Lake, some 40 or 50 miles north of the Thompson. At this point we left the Thompson and camped for the niglit, by the side of the Itiviere de la Cache, a small stream flowing into the Buonaparte. Next morning's work commenced with fording the Buona- parte. It cost us some time to find a suitable spot, the floods having made the ordinary ford impassable ; but at last we managed to cross, the horses being now and then swept off their legs into deep water, and having to swim for it. En passant, I would remark that it is by no means so easy to swim a horse across a rapid stream as it may seem to a horseman who has not tried it ; the rolling motion given to the animal by the swift current making the rider very apt to lose his balance. Ill II , m n p . u I !:■ mi mi- J' rl II 111* !! M3i % *1» *i it i: '-.^if' 126 A DIFFICULT BRIDGE. Chap. VI. The Buonaparte, however, was not tlie most difficult river we had to cross on this day's journey. For at the Riviere Defant the water was found to be so deep as to make it necessary to swim tlie horses all the way a-ross, without the chance of their gauiing a footing from shore to shore. We were particularly anxious to avoid this necessity on account of the instruments, which would infallibly be damaged, and after a long search we came upon the trunk of a tree by which Indians were evidently accustomed to cross. To our annoyance, however, the river had risen so high that this rough bridge was at least two feet under the water, which tore over it with the rapidity of a mill-stream ; so that, unless a rope could be carried over and fastened at the other side to form a balustrade, it seemed quite impossible to get ourselves and the luggage across safely. However, St. Paul seemed determined that this should be done, and several of his men stripping to the work endeavoured gallantly to cross the river. As often, however, as they managed to get to the middle of the primitive bridge, the elasticity of the tree, together with the velocity of the current, sent them spinning off, and they were swept down the stream, having to swim vigorously for their lives. After many successive failures, we had almost made up our minds tliat we should have to loiter by the river's side for a day or so, until its waters should have subsided — for there were no trees handy large enough to frame a bridge with — when St. Paul, whose anger had I'isen at the ill-success of each fresh attempt, to our astonish- ment leap' up — we were all lying on the ground watching the baffled Indians — and throwing off his clothes ran forward to their aid. In his weak and exhausted condition, we made sure that the effort and excitement of such an attempt would act most injuriously if not fatally upon him, and did our best to dissuade him from making it. Nor were we altogether unselfish in this, perhaps, since we knew that, if the old chief lost his life in our service, it would not only be most painful Chap. VI. DEXTERITY OF ST. PAUL. 127 to us, but that wo should lose all the Indians, who would infallibly return to Kamloops with his corpse, to take part in his wake. However, tlie spirit of the old man was roused, and breaking from us he was soon standing mid-stream, the rope in his hand, yelling to his men, and swearing in a French jargon peculiar to himself, with a zeal and originality that would have inspired the members of Captain Shandy's troop in the Low Countries with admiring envy. Very much to our relief, as may be supposed, St. Paul succeeded in scrambling over the fragile bridge with the agility of a monkey, and, the rope being made fast to the other side, we crossed with comparative ease. Not, however, without getting thoroughly wet and spoiling one of the instruments about which I felt so anxious. \\'ith all my care, when I came to look at my sextant, I found that it had been under water, and that the pieces of wood that kept it in its place in the case had been loosened and Avere floating about. Fortu- nately, however, I had a pocket one with me, so that its loss was not so important as otherwise it would have been. All now fairly over, we halted for breakfast. I had found before leaving Kamloops that when travelling with the oflicers of the Hudson Bay Company, St. Paul was always admitted to their mess, and upon starting I had of course invited him to join ours. The Indian is so quick at observing and imitating the manners of those with whom he is brought into contact, that the old chief had learnt to conduct himself with perfect composm*e and decorum, and the beef with which he had provided himself on starting, proved a welcome addition to our bacon. Follovvmg the course of the Buonaparte until its junction with the Chapeau, we turned up the valley through which that river flows. There is much good land along the Buona- parte; the whole being clothed with long grass, of which the horses seemed very fond. We carried no fodder with us on this expedition, turning the horses loose at night to graze. I i \ 4 I' i IJih I' 128 AMERICAN FARMERS. Chap. VT. h I- r!i k i; li III;! • '■ t u : Thoy never strayed far. One of course was hobbled, and at daybreak an Indian cauglit and mounted him, driving in the otliers. We followed the course of tlio Cliapeau until it opened into a large valley running southward, in which the river rises, and through which also another small river runs to join the Frascr, some 20 miles above Lytton. Through this valley the Indians told us there was a trail by which Lytton might be reached in two days.* Taking a northerly direction, we jiasscd a small lake called Lake Crown, and soon came to the I'avillon Lake. The mountains here are of limestone and rise abruptly from the lake's edge, causiiig the trail to be somewhat narrow and dangerous. But this place and the Mauvais Ilocher on the Shuswap I^ake were the only spots u] on the whole of our rc/ute from Kamlooi)S to Pavilion, along which waggons might not have travelled with case. Of course in saying this I suppose the rivers bridged. Lake Pavilion is six miles long by one wide. On its south bank there is a mountain some 3000 or 4000 feet high, which is topped with a very remarkable peak, not at all unlike a watch-tower built there to keep a look-out over the Fraser. The Indians call this Skillipaalock, which being interpreted means a linger or joint. Just beyond the Pavilion Lake we passed a log hut, near which a farmer wfis ploughing — it was the first time I had seen such an implement in lise in British Columbia — very diligently with two horses. This farm, of which I shall have occasion to speak hereafter, had, we found, been occu- pied by a couple of Amaricans for more than a year. They described their land as good, and spoke well of their prospects. Their princijml oocupation at present consisted in growing vegetables, &c., for the miners. The Pavilion River ran close by their hut, giving them a plentiful supply of 1 ♦ Lately this valley has becom< the higli road from Lytton to Cariboo. n ! CllAP. VI. PAVILLON. 129 vvutor. It is a small stroftni /lowinp; from tho liiko, mid (liHcliargiiinj itself into the Fraacr at I'avillnn. Altojjetiier wo were five days making the journey from Kamloojw to Pavilion, althouj^h the distaneo is a little under 100 mileH. We had been much impeded, however, by the swollen state of tiie riv<'rs, and had ridden very leisurely, eonstantly stopping to take bearings and make observations generally. Pavilion stands upon a terruci! very similar to that upon which Lytton is situated, but some 100 feet or so higher. It eonsisted at that time of a score or so of minors' huts, and had gained its name from the fact of an Indian chief having been buried here, over whose grave, after the fashion of this i)e()ple, a large white Hag had been kept Hying. It has sine*} become a much more important place, fonning a sort of head-quarters for the miners and the mule-trains, who from Pavilion, branch north and south to the diggings at Alexandria, Cariboo, and Kamloops. We wished much to have pushed on from Pavilion to Alexandria, although at that time the diggings at Cariboo and Quesnelle were unthought of, and Alexandria was only known as a more distant station of the Hudson Pay Com- pany. But poor St. Paul was knocked up by the efforts he had already made, and in such sulTering that it was quite impossible to expect him to accompany us further. Almost all the way, indeed, he had been obliged to ride his horse in side-saddle fashion, and his exertions at the Defant lliver had used up what little strength he had, besides aggravating the pain he always suffered from his wounded knee. Accord- ingly, these considerations, coupled with the expense of pre- paring a new party for the trip, and the fact that we had already done more and gone farther than had been marked out for me in the Governor's programme of instructions, determined us to return by the llarrison-Lilloett route to the mouth of the Fraser. After staying three days at Pavilion, daring which time the wind blew and the dust tormented us K |! I'; & I II ! 4 i, if j CI r !| I N • [■ ^ ' ^ p \i. k m' («•' ilil '^^^ 130 A DRUNKEN SCUFFLE. Chap. VI. much as it had done at Lytton, wo bade St. Paul and his party adieu, starting for Cayoosh, or as it is now called Lilloett. I may say hero that while at Pavilion we experienced the only trouble with Indians I have ever had while travelling. A half-breed who was journeying with us, although not of our party, having a bullock to sell, disposed of it for 200 or 300 dollars, purchasing with part of its price a keg of whisky. Upon the contents of this he very soon got drunk, and must needs reduce the rest of our party to the same plight ; so that in the dead of the night I was roused by the sound of scuffling going on outside the tent, and became aware of what all who have had any expe- rience in camping will agree with me in calling a very dis- agreeable sensation, caused by a number of men tumbling over the tent-ropes. Going out, we found that St. Paul and one of his sons were the only sober men of our escort. Fortunately my gun was the only one belonging to the party, and most of the knives were in St. Paul's tent, or the consequences might have been serious. As it was, the offending half-breed was driven away, two or three of the more refractoiy Indians knocked down, and peace re-esta- blished, in a way we, without St. Paul, would have found it very difficult to accomplish. It may be interesting to note that when I was at Pavilion, flour was selling at 35 cents {Is. b^d.) the pound, and bacon at 75 cents (3s.). A few months earlier in the winter these high prices had been more than double. The charges for the carriage of goods were also very high, as much as 25 cents per lb., being paid from Rivillon to Kandoops, while to P>ig Bar, a place only 18 miles distant, the rate was 8 cents, or 4y/. Wo were now left without any attendants, but as we knew that there wore regular mule-traiiis on the Harrison-Lilloett route, we determined only to engage two horses to take our baggage as far as Lilloett, and thence to accompany a train down to Port Donulas. CiiAi'. VF. BUrPOSED SOURCKS OF RIVERS. 131 Big Wo started on the morning of tlio 23rfl May, and prooeed«'d towards Fountain, keeping the lol't bank of tlio Frascr, and passing along a fair trail over very good land ; our party consisting of our two selves, a coui^e of horses, and one man, who served as guide, driver, and packer. Fountain is a flat at a sharp turn in the river 12 miles below Pavilion, and derives its name from a stnall natural fountain spouting up in the middle of it. It is a much prettier site than Pavilion, and the river-bend shelters it from the gusty north and south winds which I have mentioned as being so very uncomfortable both at Lytton and Pavilion. About three miles below Fountain, and on the opposite side, the Bridge Bivor (or IToystien, as the Indians call it) joins the Fraser. This river takes its English name from the I'act of the Indians having made a bridge across its mouth, which was afterwards pulled down by two enterprising citizens, who constructed another one, for crossing which they charge the miners twenty-five cents, liridge River rises in some lakes 50 or 60 miles from its mouth. I have never visited them, but from information obtained at various times from Indians, I believe that the Bridge, Liiloett, Squaw- misht, and Clahoose Ilivers, all of which will be mentioned hereafter, take their rise in these same lakes, which, so far as I could ascertain, lie very high up in a mountain-basin, nearly north of l)esolati(jn Sound. The Bridge Iviver also runs through two lakes about JO miles from its junction with the Fraser. I once met a miner who told me ho had visited these lakes, and thought the lund round them very good and well ii(laj>te(l for agriculture. A man at Pavilion also told me he had travelled from Chilcotin Fort to these lakes by a valley parallel to the Fraser, and had then descended the river. I am inclinecl, however, to doubt whether these lakes lie so far as 40 miles up the river, as I have found that travellers almost always overestimate distances when going up a rnjiid liver. K 2 .illi 1 ^ 132 LILLOETT. Chap. VI. M *1*t 1 ' ' 1 1^' 1 ""' Just before coming to the Bridge River our guide pointed to a deserted bar opposite, and said, "Last summer I and two others made 600 dollars (200?.) each in a week there." "Why did you leave it?" I asked. "Oh, wc thought we had done enough," was the reply ; " and went to Victoria and spent it all in two or three weeks : and when I came up the river again I hadn't a cent, and so I took to packing." This is the story nearly every miner has to tell. If you question him, you will find that at some time or other he was worth several thousand dollars. He may still, perhaps, have a gold watch, or a large brooch stuck in the front of his mining-shirt, as a memento of that time, but all the rest has gone. About a mile and a half below the Bridge Eiver, at a place called French Bar, is a ferry, which we crossed. After crossing we came upon a fine flat, lightly timbered with small trees, which contiiuied to I^illoett, which is about two miles from the ferry. Lilloett is a very pretty site, on the whole decidedly the best I saw on the Fraser Kiver. It stands upon a plateau .some hundred feet above the river. On the opposite side of the Fraser is another large plateau on which the Hudson Bay Company were building a fort when I was there, which was to bo named Fort Berens, after one of their directors. Lilloett has now grown into a somewhat important town, situated as it is at the north end of the Harrison-Lilloett route, at its junction with tlie Fraser. The Inkumtch River runs in at the south end of the flat on which the town stands. It is a rapid stream, 40 or 50 yards wide at its mouth, and not fordable in summer. At Lilloett we found that the pack-trains came up to Port Anderson at the south end of the lake of that name, and that we must take boat across it and Lake Seton. We pro- cured two or three Indians to carry our baggage and instru- ments <() Tjuke Setf)n, wliicli was about four miles off; but liigh. CHAl'. VI. " UESTAUllANTS." 138 finding upon calculation that the expense of convoying our cooking-utensils, &c., would be considerably more than their original cost, we determined to leave them behind for the benefit of any travellers who might pass that way. We knew we could not starve, as there were several " restaurants " on the trail down ; still we took some bread with us in case of accidents. It is very awkward at first when you have to make any purchases at these places, getting your change in gold- dust. There is little or no coin in use among the miners, and they pay and transact all business in gold-dust. For a purse every one carries a chamois-leather bag containing the dust. If you offer coin, they take out their scales and weigh you off your change. I have mentioned the fiict of there being " restaurants " all along tlie Lilloctt portages, and 1 should have mentioned their existence in the canons of the Fraser also. All such places in this country are called " restaurants," although they are simply huts, where the traveller c«n obtain a meal of bacon, beans, bread, salt butter, and tea or coffee, for a dollar ; wliile, if he has no tent with him, he can select the softest plank in the floor to sleep on. Of course these places vary with their situation. At those on the Lower Fraser meals can now, I believe, be had for half-a-doUar, and sometimes eggs, beef, and vegetables can be got. On the other hand, at those far up the river I paid a dollar and a half for the bare miner's fare of bacon, beans, and bread. Miners suffer a great deal from inflamed mouths, which is very generally attributed to their constant diet of bacon. By some, however, it is attributed to the water of the river. We started for Lake Seton on the afternoon of the same day that we reached Lilloett, and, turning off from the Fraser Kiver, followed the Inkumtch, up a deep narrow valley between two magnificent mountains some 5000 feet high. About l,alf-way to Jjuke Seton we found that the river divided; one branch coniijig from the lake and the [i ' i (• if.': 134 LAKES SETON AND ANDERSON. (JllAP. VI. ai i 1- ■fir Wri' i I w h ¥ ■t' £ tt !i '\l other clown a gorge on the left. This branch is said to take its rise in a lake some miles below Lilloctt, and between the lake of that name and the Frascr Kiver. After walking about four miles we emerged from the mountain-pass and came out on Lake Seton. Here we had to get a canoe to cross the river, as the boatmen's huts were on the other side of it. We crossed, and, as it was late, pitched our tent and made arrangements for a boat with four men to take us over the lake in tlie morning. In the morning accordingly we started, and had a most tedious cold pull of four hours' duration. On this lake, and, indeed, on all the chain of lakes, it blows almost incessantly from the southward during the day, the wind commencing at nine or ten and dying away at four or five, leaving the mornings and evenings calm. Lake 8eton and Lake An- derson are very like each other, although the latter trends much more to the southward than the former. Both are very deep, and bounded by mountains of 3000 to 5000 feet, which rise so abruptly from the water as to leave no room for a road even along their banks witliout a good deal of blasting and levelling. These mountains are densely Avooded, like those along the coast. The two lakes are each 14 or 15 miles long, and are separated by a neck of land a mile and a half in extent, with a stream of 20 or 30 yards wide running through it. There is a small restaurant at the south end of Lake Seton, and another larger one at the south end of Lake Anderson, for the entertainment of the muleteers, &c., who sleep there after coming from Port Pemberton; returning on the following day. We were lucky enough to find a mule-train starting next morning, and ari-anged to accompany it. At this time the charge was eight cents (4|(?.) per pound for packing goods along this portage, the length of which is about 25 miles. This portage, which extends from Port Anderson to Port Pemberton on the Lilloett Lake, was at first called the < IJ ClIAP. VI. THE LILLOETT VALLEY. 135 Birkenhead Portage, l)ut since has acquired the much more appropriate name of Mosquito Portage. When I passed along it tlie trail was on the whole good, though in some parts very indifferent. But this summer will probably see a wagg road constructed from one end to the other. The valley througli which the road lies averages about 1500 yards in width. At Port Anderson, however, where it is widest, it is about two miles broad. There is a stream running the whole way along it, having a watershed at the Summit Lake about nine miles from Port Anderson. From this lake, when the water is high, the rivers run either way, one into Lake Anderson and the other into the Lilloett Ilivor, just above Port Pemberton. When the waters are out the north branch only runs from the lake, the true source of the south branch being a few yards from it. The Summit Lake is, as nearly as I could estimate it, 800 feet above Lake Ander- son and 1800 above the sea. The banks of the river are low and covered with willows, &c., and there are a number of small streams running into it at intervals all the way along. There are only two of these of any size, which come down rather large valleys. The mountains on either side range I'rom 1000 to 5000 foet high, and are generally very steep. All the level spots are cc\ered with wild peas, vetches, lettuce, and several sorts of berries. The mosquitoes along the portage were more troublesome than I had ever found them (at that time) elsewhere. Five or six miles before reaching Port Pemberton the valley opens out, and there are several miles of splendid grass-land on the right, through which the Lilloett Iviver runs into the lake of the same name. On this occasion I had not much opportunity for observing these Lilloett meadows, as they are called, but upon my next visit I came upon them by the Lilloett Valley, and walked all over them. Several agricultural settlers were already there, and it is a i '. .1 ' I 13(3 THK FALL OF IIAIN PARTIAL. CllAl'. VI. I I il; lovely spot for 8ettlem(*nt. The river here divides into several small streams, which run through the })lain in all directions, cutting it up into fine fields, and gi'catly adding to its hoauty. Port Pemberton is at the north end of Lilloett Lake, and consists of a couple of restaurants and half-a-dozen huts, occu- pied by muleteei-s and boatmen. The great objection to its site is that there is a large Hat off it, which in winter dries the whole way across the lake, so that even boats cannot get to the town, and all goods have to be landed a quarter of a mile below it. This is, however, quite unavoidable, as there is no place further down the lake on which to build a town, the mountains rising nearly perpendicularly from the water. When the road was in contemplation Captain Grant, Il.E., who had command of the men at work upon it, examined the meadows with a view of seeing if it would answer better to take the road from the other side of the lake, but he decided against it. This lake is in ai)pearance much like the others I have described. We got across the Lilloett Lake the same afternoon, sleoii- ing that night at Port Lilloett. Early next morning we again set out. It rained the Avhole night wliile we were at Port Lilloett, and wo were informed that this was the first rain that had fallen since the beginning of the year. This illustrates the partiality of the rain in this region, where January, February, March, and April had passed without a shower, while at Victoria it had rained almost incessantly for the first half of that period. Next morning we started for Port Douglas. At the time I first went along tliis — which I have before said is called the Douglas Portiige — there was only the trail which had been cut by the party who had volunteered for the purpose. Hav- ing no engineer with them, they gave themselves a vast deal more trouble than there was any occasion for, by making the Chap. VI. IIAinilSON LAKE. 137 trail pass over all sorts of ridges which miglit have been avoided. Eight uiiles from Port Lilloett the traveller comes to a very curious hot spring, called St. Agnes' Well, so named from one of the Governor's daughters. It runs in a small stream out of a mass of conglomerate into a natural basin at its foot, overflowing wliich it finds its way into the Ijilloett River. Here have been built a restaura'"* and bath- house. On my first visit I stopped to bathe, and found the water in the basin hotter than I could bear. Unfortunately my thermometer was only marked to 120°, up to which the mercury flew instantly. I believe its temperature has since been ascertained to bo 180° Fahr. I have said that the Lilloett River runs down nearly to Port Douglas. When I passed down no canoes were able to ascend, though some went down the stream. In winter, how- PToT, a good deal of traffic is carried on by iLe river, at a cost less than the land-carriage. This river varies greatly in Avidth, ranging from 50 to 150 yards. About nine miles below Port Lilloett a large stream, called by the Indians the Amockwa, joins it ; and about the same distance above Port Douglas another river, called the Zoalklun, runs into it, coming, it is said, from a lake called Zoalkluck. Two large hills have to bo crossed on this portage, which have been named Sevastopol and Gibraltar ; the latter rises just i)efore entering Port Douglas, and on its south side are the iinest cedars * I saw in the m hole countiy. There is a stream running down a gorge in this hill, and a large water-mill has been erected about half-a-mile from the town, so that I dare say considerable havoc has been made among the cedars by this time. The scenery on the Harrison Lake is much finer than on the upper ones. It is also much longer, being 45 miles in * Junipei'us occideutalia ? Cohunbia. I bt'liovc there iu no true cecliu- in Lritiali i I I :i :r ^ ^'' 1' if » 1 ^ F i 1« i ;■ .^j Ma II'. i i ■ : 1 if ! ; i' if it i :l 138 SUDDRN CHANGES OP TEMPERATURE. Chap. VI. length, and four or five broad. There are several islands upon it, and some large and apparently fertile valleys running into it. In some of these silver has been found, and one or more companies have been started to work it. During our journey we found the change of temperature very great and sudden. I have seen the thermometer 31° in the sliade in the morning, 95° at noon, and 40° again the same evening. On the 19th June we rejoined the * Plumper ' at Esqui- mau. » iM ■ J •I 51 :i in i.f i ■\ i m\ SKETCH MAP OF HARO ARCHIPELAGO, SHOWING THE TKREE CHANNELS. I.iM. ( r.AiMi i> iiv Tin: Umii n SiAir s. Link cr.AiMr.u by (Iukat UrjiAiN. rniiiisrn Midi'I.k Ciiannki,. 1'm;;u i;i!'. CilAl'. VII. 'UK UOUNDAHY QUESTION. 139 CIIAPTEll VII. -*o^ Anioricaii occviimtion of San Jnttii Irtlaiid — Arrivwl of tlii> Flaj^'sliip, 1I.M.8. 'Oiiiigoa' — Iiik'ta of tlif"C ■I ■ i if? li 1 i*'^ 140 AUltlVAL OF TIIK FLA(J-SIII1'. Chap. VII. Washiiif^ton, without any notice, liiiKlod soldiers upon the ishujd ol' Sun Junu, who still remain there. The same reasons which keep nie tilont upon this proceed- iiifif of the American General prevent my doing more than allude to the angry excitement which it caused in the colonies and at home. The events of that period will still bo fresh in their memory of my readers. It will, therefore, bo remembered how nearly war between the two countries was approached, and by what judicious and timely arrange- ments it was averted. I will merely remark, in conclusion, that, during the present domestic troubles of the American people, this dispute is temporarily shelved. San Juan is at present held by equal bodies of troops of Great Britain and America,* and the question remains open for settlement at some future period. August 5th. — The flagship arrived, with divers on board, who, upon examining the 'Plumper,' found that she had received so much damage that it was detennined, so soon as the coming winter-work was finished, to proceed to San Francisco, where the necessary repairs" could be made. August liHh. — A report reaching the Governor of some settlers in Burrard Inlet having been seized and detained by the Indians, we were despatched thither to investigate this matter, but, upon our arrival, we found the report untrue. I will take the present opportunity of giving a short and general description of the more important of those long arms of the sea, or inlets, which, as a glance at the map will show the reader, stretch at comparatively small intervals inland along the coast of British Columbia. Some of these were not surveyed until a period considerably later than the time of which I am now writing, while others are still unexplored. It must be many years before these shores can be of any value to the new colony ; and it is mainly with the hope '' About lUU mcu of each uatiou. Chap. VII. nilRHARI) INLKT. of (lisnovorinff, from tlio liotvl f>f ono of thoiu, ii HI •i^, ..w... i.f, ..V .... ... w..,. w. „.., ,,., .. in •liroct roiito or routes to tlio pfold-fiolds on tho Uppor Friisor than that aflfonlod by tho rivor, that exploring parties have l>(»en, and still are, busy examininj^ them. All those inlets possess eertain <^eneral eharacteristies. They run up between steep mountains three or four thousand feet in height ; tho water is deep, and anehorages far from plentiful ; while thoy terminate, almost without exeeption, in valleys, — occasionally largo and wide, at other times mere gorges, — through which one or more rivers struggle into tho sea. They may be said, indeed, to resemble largo fissures in the coast mote than anything else. In tho days of Vancouver these arms of the sea were diligently searched in the hope of discovering through ono of them the long lookc^d- for passage that should connect the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. It was not indeed until after many successive disaj)p()int- ments that Vancouver seems to have relinquished this ho}»e ; and although of course some inaci.'uracies have been found in his charts of those ])arts, their general correctness, together with the amount of labour they must have cost him, and tho patience and perseverance with which he fur- rard," after a friend of that name in the Iloval Navy. This inlet differs from most of tho otliei-s in possessing several good anchorages. It is divided into three distinct harbours, which are separated from each otlier by narrows, through \vhicli the tide rushes with such velocity as to render them impassable by any but powerful steamers except, at slack-water or with the tide. The entrance of Burrard Inlet lies 11 miles from tho sand-heads of the Fraser lliver. English Bay is the an- chora\ I f /J :#** 142 IIOWE ROUND. ClIAP. VII. 4ti % : I I and is of c'oiisidoraltlo importaiipo to vessels enterlnpj at ni<;lit, or wlieii tlio tide is running: out tliroiiu^li the narrows, affordiiifr tliciu an anchorapjo where tlieyean wait eomfortahly until niorniiijj^ or turn of tide, instead of drifting ahout the place. I'wo miles inside the first narrows is Coal Harbour, where coal has been found in considerable quantities and of f?ood quality, although the demand is not yet sufficient to induce speculators to work it in opposition to the already establish(>d mines at Nanaimo. Six miles above Coal Har- bour, the inlet divides ajxain into two arms; one of which runs iidand about ten miles, the other openiuG: into Port IMoody, wln'ch forms the head of the southern arm. Port Moodv is a V(^)-y snup: harbour, three miles long, and avei aging half-a- milo wide, though only 400 yards across at the entrance. It is the possession of this port, with its proximity by land to New Westminster upon the Fraser River, from whicli place it is distant but five miles, which gives to Bun-ard Inlet its pre- sent im})ortance. During tlie winter the Lower Fraser is sometimes frozen up, and the only access to Britisli Columbia then open is by the way of Burrard Inlet and Port Moody. Hither the stcrjnors have to take their passengers, mails, and cargo ; whence, by a short, good road, they are conveyed to New Westminster. During last winter (1861-02), whicli was unusually severe, the Fraser was entirely blocked up; and this way, and an out-of-tlie-way, inconvenient trail of seven miles from ]\Iu(l Bay, inside Point Boberts, were the only routes by which the interior of British Columbia could for some considerable time be readied. Immediately north of Burrard Iidet is Howe Sound, the north point of the former forming tl\e south shore of the latter. This sound runs inland for about 20 miles, and is wider than the other inlets, liaving a breadth at its entrance of six mih^s. At its head is a wide, extensive valley, thc! soil of which is very good, and tlu'ough whicli seveial rivers run into the inlet: tlie largest of these, the Squawmislit, is navigable ClIAP. VII. JERVIS INLET. 143 for 20 miles for canoes. From this point, wliicli, liow- ovor — so tortuous is tlic rivor — is only distjUit ton miles from the head of the somid. a road might, with no groat ba Inlets, to fish, and were, therefore, likely to be well acquainted with the country through which at such times they must i)ass on their way to the coast. They were called Loquilts, the proper Indians of Jervis Inlet being named Sechelts. « From these Indians I ascertained that the Ih'idgo River, one — the north — branch of tlic Lilloett, together with the Squawmisht and the Clahoose Kivers, which empty into Desolation Sound, all take their rise in three f)r four small lakes lying in a mountain basin some 50 or 00 miles from the coast due north of Jervis Inlet. Mr. Downie, when exploring Bute Inlet with a view to a way from the coast inland, went four or five n)il(>s up the Clahoose liiver, which he described as large and broad, running in a north-east direction. "The Indians," he wrote, "told me it would take five days to get to the head of it. Judging from tho way a conoe goes up such rivers, the distance would bo about sixty miles, and it must be a long way above the Quanii.sh (Squaw- misht), iuid n(»t far from the Lilloett. Th«' Indians have i>-^'S' a CiiAP. YII. ROUTES TO THE INTEIUOR. 145 gone tills route to thu houd of ]>ri(lgo Rivor, and it may prove to be the best route to try. It is very evident tliere is a pass in the coast-range here tluit will make it preteral)le to Jarvis Inlet or Howe Sound. If a route can be got through, it will lead diicot to JJridge River." It is now three years since ]\[r. Downie made the above statement; and T thiidc it is probable that he has long since changed the o})iniou he then expressed as to the route to the Bridge Iliver being the most pi-actieable and best of those propos<,'d to the Upper Fraser. So little, how(?ver, is known of this valley — and that little comes from Indian information — that th(> route advocated liy Mr. Downie may yet be found to equal liis expectations of it. Since my return from the colony it has been again examined and adopted by a com- pany, who projjose at once to open it up. It is asserted by them that this way is ni>arly twenty miles shorter than the Rentinclc Arm roc+e to Alexandriii, and that no .serious obstacles intervene to prevent striking the h'l-aser at a point where steamers can be put on to }»ly on the T^i)j)er River. The right to construct this rout(!, and to ('(jllcct tolls on the |»ack-trail for five years, at H cents per lb., and 50 cents for animals — with, should a waggon-road be constructed, T) cents per lb. toll — has been conceded to them. In their j)rospectus the distance of the route proposed is set down as 241 miles, of which cS3 miles are river and lake navigation, and 158 land-carriage, ofA/ring an advantage over the rival route by Rentinck Arm, which has a longer land-carriage. Before this summer is out, the question of superiority will in all probability ho settled. The next inlet, north of Bute, is Loughborough. Beyond are Knight Inlet and Fife Sound, of which conqjaratively little is known. In 18(51 ^Ir. Downie went up Knight Inlet and discovered phunbago, which, when testi'd, did not prove to be so rich as he at first sight tlionght it. The entrance to Fifo Sound is luarkid by a magniliccnt r.i r'i^ i?3 .1? m 14G 1{0UTFS TO THE INTERIOR. Chap. VII. i!.^ ,* mountain on its nortli side, which Vancouver named "Stephens," after the then First I^ord of the Admiralty. Above tliis point up to our coast houndary, in 54° 40' north latitude, is a succession of ink^ts known only to the Indians Avho inhabit them, and some of the Hudson Bay T'ompany's employes. One of these, through which it is thought by many that the much-desired road to the inteiior of the country will be found to lie, "Deans Canal," has recently attracted con- sid(>rable notice. The entrance to this inlet is about 80 nn'les from the north end of Vancouver Island ; it runs in- land some 50 miles, under the name of lUirlce Cliannel, and then divides into three arms: one. Deans Canal, running nearly north for 25 miles ; the others, called the North and South licntinck Arms, pursuing north-easterly and south- easterly directions. By one or other of these channels it is pretty conlidcntly exjtected that a good available route to the interior will bo found to exist. No doubt attention Avas drawn to this spot not a little from the fact, that years ago Sir iVlexandor IMcKenzio did actually penetrate from the interior to the sea here. Subsequently it was known that a ]Mr. McDonald had fouul his way fiom Fort Fraser to the coast, coming out at Deans Canal, and, it was said, making the journey with ease and expedition ; while later, letters were conveyed more than once by some such route, by Indian messengers, from the Hudson Bay Company's steamer ' Beaver,' lying in the Bentinck Arm, to tlie ofhcer in cliaige of Fort Alexandria, high up the Fraser Biver. When Sir Alexander McKenzie explored this part of the country, he appears to have ascended the A^'cst-road Kiver from the Fraser, and then, crossing the ridge ibrming the watershed, to have descended to the sea. His route has never been exactly followed; but in 18G0 3[r. Colin ]\[cKenzie crossed from Alexandria to the same })lace on the coast, viz., Rascals' Villnge, or JJell-honla l>ay,* in tln'rteon days by way T\u> iiii'tini licit l!(ll-\vli(iila. Chap. VII. MR. BARNSTON'S LETTER. 147 of Chilcotin Lake. His party travelled the greater portion of the way on horseback : IMr. IMcKcnzio told nie that they might have taken their animals all the way by rhanging the route a little. On their way back, indeed, they did so. The ascent to the watershed was, he said, so gradual, that they only knew they had passed the summit by finding tliat the streams ran west, instead of east. Since that time another gentleman, Mr. Bamston, has travelled by much the same route. His journey is described in a letter which ho wrote to j\Ir. I*. Ivind, Gold Commissioner at Cariboo, in July, 18G1, and whicli, as illustrating the character of the country and the obstacles met with in the construction of trails, I am enabled, by the kind permission of that gentle- man, to give to the reader : — " We left Alexandria on the 2 1th ]\[ay last, and after the loss of several days from accidental causes, such as missing trail, &c., arrived at Lake Anawhim on the 8tli June. We loft tliis place on the 10th. On the 12th wo camped in the Coast Eange. On the 13th we descended into the valley of Atanaioh, or Bell-houla Kiver, and camped a few miles down. Here we left our horses with I'earson and Bitchie. On the evening of the 17th JMcDonald and I, accompanied by Tom- kins, started on foot for tlie coast. We arrived at the Bell- houla village, Nout-chaoff, early on the morning of the IKth. Here we obtained a canoe and descended to Koiigotis, the head of the Bell-houla (North Bentinek Arm), in six hours, "^riie cause of our horses being It 'ft behind >vas the swollen state of the mountain-torrents running into the Bell-honla Biver. These streams are, however, quite small and narrow, and could be bridged at little expense. On the 24th we left Knngotis to return in the same canoe, and arrived at Nout- cliaoft* on the 25th. I'lie trail between the two villages is good. From Nout-chaoff to camp it took us two days, a distance usimll} travelled by Indians with packs in one. On the HOth we broke up camj) on liell-honla Biver, and arrivctl L 2 f«...: / f n I -ij ;^i .; *. 148 MR. BAHNSTON'S LETTER. Chap. VII. in Alexandria on the 10th, travelling moderately with packed animals. The Bell-houla River could be made navigable for light-draught steamers as far up as Nout-chaoff, and perhaps above. From tlionce pack-trains coiUd make Alexandria, or the mouth of Canal Kiver,* if a trail were made tliere, easily in 14 or 15 days. The trail to Canal lliver would probably have to diverge from the Alexandria trail at Chisikut Lake about 75 miles from Alexandria. The trail runs the whole distance from Alexandria to Coast Range on a kind of table-land, wln'ch is studded in every direction with lakes and meadows : feed is plentiful. The streams are mnaerous, but small and shallow ; in fact, mere creeks. There are some swamps, whi(*li require corduroying. Tliere is plenty of fallen timber; but it is liglit and could easily be cleared. Tliere is also a kind of red earth, whicli is in places very mirv ; the cause of this is I think, want of drainaire. This miry ground and the swamps are the greatest t)bjections tliat can be urged against the road. The swamps, however, liave one advantage over such i)]aces generally, — that is, in their foundation, which is rocky and strong. The trail might be shortened in some places, but not a great deal. Wly (iiu'isiicllc River. It!': Chap. VII. ROUTES TO TIIK INTERIOR. 141) [ver h a deep gorge or pass in the mountains tlio wliole way to tlio coast. Tliere is, however, another road from T.alce Anawliim, which strikes the river at Nout-ehaoft', whicli the Inch'ans informed ns was the better road. They also told us tliat if wo had taken this road we could have rcaohcxl Nout-rhaoff with our horses, as we should have thereby avoided the worst jjail; of the other road and the torrents. Kougotis, the head of the inlet, would be the head of navigation for sea-going vessels. "We thiidc that if a road were made from the liell-houla Inlet, to strike the Fraser somewhere about the mouth of the Qur^snoUe liiver, and from thence into the Cariboo, &c., a con- siderable saving in the cost of transportation would be effected. We can hardly make an approximate estimate even of what it Avould cost to make the trail passable ; but it would not cost much considering the distance and style of country, and could easily be made available for next summer's operations." If the readr^r will follow on the map the lino between the Bentinck Arm (Ikdl-houla) and Alexandria, he will see that it lams straight east and west between the two places for 1(!0 miles. I'his is the route to the gold-iields, south of that taken by Sir A. IMcKenzie, which is proposed to be adopted, and to open up which another company, in opposition to the Bute Inlet scheme, has been organised. It is affirmed that the road becomes open and practicable for animals in the beginning of April, and that the snow at Bell- houla and the main plateau above it disappears early in the year. At prc^sent and for some time to come no accommoda- tion for travellers speak from perscmal ex- perience : — " My suggestion would be, let a man take up sufli- cient provisions for the road ; or if he Avishes to avoid the heavy outlay Avhich a poor miner must experience before he has struck a claim, let him take sufficient to last him three or four weeks, and pack one, two, or three Indians, as the case may be. I assure him he will find no dilliculty in pro- curing Indians. Nootlioch (iin Indian lodge) is 30 miles up the river; for 15 miles above this goods can be taken in small canoes. Narcoontloon is 80 miles ; a good road with the excerption of one bad hill. Here there is another Indian lodge, from which it is 50 miles to Chilcotin ; good trail, perfectly level. From there it is 00 miles to Alexandria, or about 70 to the mouth of (iucsnelle River. The trail from the top of the Nootlioch hill is for foot-i)assengers as good the whole way as any part of the Brigade Trail, with the exce])tion of one or two jjlaces, where there is a little fallen timber. The trail follows a chain of lakes, and could conse- quently, if taken straight, be made much shorter, and also avoid much soft ground. Game and fish are abundant on the road : I caught several trout with a string and a small hook and a grasshopper on my way down. The Aunghim and Chilcotin Indians have a good many horses, which might be turned to use for packing." Alexandria, however, which is the proposed terminus in this route from Bell-houla, is some 50 or 00 miles south of those diggings, which are now the most profitable in the country, and which, under the general name of the Cariboo gold-tields, extend from the lake of that name to Bear Kiver, and are likely to extend still farther north, should the opinion of many of the miners that the richest diggings still remain to be found on the IVace Itiver, northward of that spur of the Ixocky IMountains, which turns the course of the Fraser southward, prove correct. It seems, therefore, likely 1 ct\': ClIAP. VII. ROUTES TO TIIK INTKIIIOR. 151 that tlio line of route proposed by other ndventurers, running from Dean's Ciinal, in a nortli-eastorly direction, to the Naehuten Lakes, and aion^ the river of tl»e same name to Fort Fraser, may bear oft'tlie [)ahn, particularly if, as is very probable, Stuart Iviver be found navigable for steamers from that plaee to Fort Geor^^e, where it meets the Fraser. In the summer of 1851) j\Ir. Downie explored a still more uorthwai'd route from Fort Essington, by a river called by him the Skena, but which must be the same as that known inland as the Simpson or liabine, and which flows from Lake Babine. This route is less direct than any of the others, and is so far north as to be unavailable for the greater pait of the year. Mr. Downie's interesting account of this journey will be found in the Appendix. It will be seen that he reports the country through which he travelled to be auriferous, that he found evidence of most extensive dejjosits of coal of a quality superior to any specimen of that mineral which he had i)re- viously seen in British Columbia and Vancouver Island, and that the land generally seemed excellent and well adapted for agi'icultural purposes. , Forty miles north of Port Essington, and 240 from the north end of Vancouver Island, Fort Simpson is reached, which is situated as nearly as jjossible upon the line of boun- dary between Great Britain and lUissia. This post has been established for many years, and is surrounded somewhat thickly by Indians, among whom 31r. Duncan ; the missionary teacher, of whose self-denying life and valuable labours I shall here- after have occasion to speak at greater length, works with such singular success. Fjoni the 25th August to the 30th September we were em})loyed among the inner channels between Nanaimo and Victoria, and in putthig down a set of buoys on the sands at the entrance of the Fraser Iviver. On the islands in these inner channels there are now several agricultural settlements, the principal one being on Admiral Island, an island foiu'teeu H ' ,. .f ' ft I -I 152 COWITCIIIN IIA?J'.01U. CllAI'. VII, S ^ [ miles lon^ hy lour or iivo wide, Imviiifj;' two or tliroo excellent liarl)Ours, mul (!ontainin<^ iimeli good land. On this island there are .salts})rin^s. Admiral Island is next to Vancouver, iVom which it is separated by a narrow strait, called Sausum Narrows, which at its narrowest part is little more than liall-a-niih* wide. Four ndles west of the south part ot Admiral Island, Cape Kep[)el, is Cowitchin Harbour. As a harbour tin's is not worth nnich ; but it will be of imj)ortanec whin the C.owitchin Valley, which I'uns back from it, becomes setlh'd. 'I'liis valley is the most extensive yet discovered on the island, and is reported by the colonial oflicers \\\n) surveyed it to contain .')(),U00 or 4(),()()0 acres of good land. It is peoiih'd by the Cowitchin tribe of Indians, who, as I have mentioned, are considerc^da badly-disposed set, and have shown )\o favour to those settlers who have visited their valley. Although it has been surveyed it cannot yet be settled, as the Indians are unwilling to sell, still less to be ousted from their land. Through this valley runs the Cowitchin Kiver, which comes from a largo lake of the same name, and 2-1 miles inland, and empties itself into the head of Cowitchin Har- bour. It is navigable for several miles for canoes. Between Cowitchin and Nanaimo there is a considerable quantity of good land, which has been surveyed and is called the Chemanos district. Immediately south of Cowitchin Harbour is the 8aanich Inlet, a deep indentation running 14 miles in a south-south-east direction, carrying deep water to its head, and terminating in a narrow creek within four miles of Esquimalt Harbour. This inlet forms a peninsula of the south-east portion of Van- couver Island of about 20 miles in a north-north-west and south- south-east direction, and varying in breadth from eight miles at its southern i)art to three at its northern. On the southern coast of this peninsula are the harbours of Esquimalt and Victoria, in the neighbourhood of which for some five miles CiiAr. Yll, START FOR SAN FllAN'CISCO. 153 tho country is pn^tty tliickly wooded — its prevailing features lako and mountain — witli, liowuvor, some considi rablo tracts of clear and feililo land. The Uf^i-thcrn jjortion for about ten miles contains some of tlie best agricultural land in Van- couver Island. The coast hero, as everywhere else, is fringed with pine; but in the ceutio it is clear prairie or oakdand, most of it now under cultivation. Seams of coal have also been found here. On the eastern or peniii,-.nlur side of the inlet are some good anchorages, the centro1jt,'ing for the most jtart deep. A mile and a half from the head of the iidet is a large lake;, called Langford Lake, which is very lila-ly to be called into recpiisition some day to sui)ply the shiiss in Esqui- malt Harbour, from which it is two miles and a half distant, with water. Outside the Saanich peninsula is C(jr(U)Vii Chan- nel, extending to Discovery Island, seven miles from Victoria. Like all these inner passages, this one is quite safe for steamers, but, from the varying (.'urrents, dangerous for sailing vessels. As several farms have been istablished along the shore of the island here, looking out on the llaro Strait, and the land is unich more clear than usual, this is one of the prettiest parts of the island. On the 30th September the Admiral (Sir 11. L. Baynes, K.C.B.), came on board, and we took him to Nunaimo and Burrard Inlet, returning to Esquimalt on the 4th October. From this time until the 28th we continued working north- ward from Nanaimo, when, having been drenched to the skin nearly every day for a month, the ca})tain determined to close the season's operations, and we made for Nanaimo. Here we found — what was not unfrcquently the case — that the Indians were all more or less drunk, owing to a grand feast which had been given by the chief of the tribe a, few days before, and that they would not got the coal out of the pit for us : we had, therefore, to help ourselves. On the lOtli of February, I8()0, having brought our winter duties to an end, we started for San Francisco, and anchored [if <■ '.. [(m:| %. »! "i ^. IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 4 I // A t/. &3 <^ /}y >m / # ^ 4 c2r 0%^ 'W '/ 1.0 I.I l^|Z8 12.5 1^ ill 2.2 mm L25 iU 11.6 — 6" Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 (716) 872-4503 A ■ 154 .SCARCITY OF TIMBEll. Cjiai'. VII. i It I that night in Neah Bay, of which I have spoken in describing the Strait of Fuca. Next morning we proceeded out of the Strait, passing several vessels on their way in. The sight of these vessels could scarcely fail to remind us of the colony which had sprung into existence since we had rounded Cape Flattery and entered that Strait three years before, when we might have steamed up and down it for a week without meet- ing more than a few vessels, and those bound to American ports. In the passage between San Francisco and Vancouver Island there is nothing worthy of particular notice, except the change from the everlasting pine-trees which fringe all our shore, to the almost treeless coast of California. One cannot help feeling that Nature has been unfair in its distri- bution of timber in these regions. California, comparatively speaking, may be said to have none, all their plank being supplied from the saw-mills before spoken of as being at work in Puget Sound and Admiralty Inlet. It was with considerable difficulty and at great expense that they managed to get sufficient wood to build a small steamer, ordered by the Federal Government to be constructed at Mare Island, the dockyard of San Francisco. Tlie coast all the way down is well lighted, but there are no good harbours; San Fran- cisco, indeed, is the only good one between the Strait of Fuca and Acapulco, which, is 1500 miles below it, on the coast of Mexico, although there are several open anchorages. The distance from Cape Flattery to the Golden Gate, as the entrance of San Francisco harbour is called, is 700 miles, and the mail-steamers make the passage generally in three days and a half to five days. We, however, were under sail much of our time, and did not make it until seven days after leaving Esquimalt. On the morning of the 17th we sighted the noble head, the name of which has been changed from " Rmta de Los Eeyes " — the gi-and name the old Spaniards had given it — to "Point lieyes" — and crossing the bar, entered the harbour at four in the afternoon. Ciup. VII. SAN FRANCISCO. 155 Nothing can be finer than the entrance to tliis magnificent harbour ; and, considering also the country of which it is the only port, its name of " Golden Gate " is very appropriate, although the name was given to it long before the discovery of gold in California. It had reference, no doubt, to the beauty of the country generally, and to the golden appear- ance it wears in spring, before the parching summer sun has scorched its verdure. Fifteen miles off the harbour is a group of rocky islands, called the Farrallones, on the southern of wliich is a light- house. Off the entrance of the harbour is Jie "Bar," on which the surf is generally rough. This bar, however, serves to let the mariner know he is off the entrance if he is trying to make the harbour in a fog ; wliich, as they prevail con- stantly from May till October, he is very likely to do. The current in the entrance varies from two to five knots. There are two lighthouses at the mouth of the harbour, and on the hill £ibove, on each side, is a telegraph-station. The constant fogs make this of little use, as ships are always slipping in and out without their arrival or departure being known. When we went in H.M.S. * Hecate,' in October, 1861, nobody knew anything of our arrival till some of the officers appeared at the club. Generally speaking, however, vessels arriving are seen as they pass Alcatraz Island, which lies in the middle of the harbour, and is a military station. Although some attempt has been made to fortify San Francisco, it is still very imperfect in this respect. The only defensive works as yet existing are, a brick fort on the south side of the entrance, intended to carry 140 guns, in three tiers of casemates, and one tier en barbette. A battery, intended to mount eleven heavy guns, is being constructed on the hill above this fort. Alcatraz Island, in the middle of the harbour, is partially fortified ; and as the guns on this island are 150 feet above the sea, it would be an awkward place to attack with ships. This island is about three miles and a half tV I ■.. ! 15G SAN FRANCISCO. Cjiai'. VII. n '"% v\ : I! II from Fort Point ; it is a small place, about 550 yards long, l)y 150 yards wide. Their guns are all en barbette, and number about 100. There is no water on the island, and they have to supply it from Saucclito Bay, five or six miles distant, and keep it in a largo tank, said to hold 50,000 gallons. I had last visited San Francisco in 1849, when the gold- fever was at its height, and there were only a dozen houses in the place, the 5000 or 6000 inhalutants being scattered about in tents. At that time the site of the present magnificent city was a bare sand-hill. In those days the harbour was filled with merchant-ships, as now ; but although they entered in great numbers, few went out, both officers and men desert- ing the ships for the diggings as soon as the anchors were let go, and leaving their cargoes to be unloaded by others. Where these vessels used then to be anchored fine streets have been erected, for all the lower part of San Francisco is built out over the harbour. IMany accidents are constantly occurring from tlio insecure way in which these streets are left. It is dangerous to go down to the wharves after dark, from the large holes left exposed, through which many poor fellows have fallen and been killed. Constant actions are being brought against the Town Council on this account. Greei Jiow, the American historian, was killed by falling through one of these places, and his widow brought an action against the Town Council, recovering the sum of 10,000 dollars for her loss. San Francisco has been twice burnt down in the twelve years during which it has been in existence. These fires have been most beneficial to the town, as most of the wooden buildings which were destroyed have been replaced by very fine bi'ick ones. Montgomery Street, the principal thorough- fare in the town, is now almost as fine a street as any European capital can boast of; equal, indeed, in the size of the build- ings and magnificence of the shops, to the best thoroughfares of London. No city in the world has, I imagine, a history so P f ■•m<. ClIAP. VII. VIGILANCE COMMITTEE. 157 short and wonderful as San Francisco. In February, 1849, the population was about 2000 : in the middle of the sarao year it had risen to 5000 ; w liile it is stated that from April, 1841), to January, 1850, nearly 40,000 emigrants amved, of which only 1500 were women. By the year 18()0, the popula- tion had risen to (50,000. In ad(h"tion to these, thousands went to the mines direct, many crossing the continent and the Sierra Nevada, where hundreds left their bones to bleach among the mountains. Among the thousands who liurried to California from every part of the world, it may be imagined there were many t)f the very dregs of society. Convicted felons from our penal colonies — every one, indeed, whose own coiuitry was too hot for him, hastened hither. Murders, incendiarisms, and every kind of crime were being daily perpetrated ; no decent man dared to walk the streets after dark, and no property was safe. Law there was not ; and where two- thirds of the population were scoundrels, it may be imagined what class of public officials would be elected under the system of universal suffrage. A\'hat, therefore, between the weakness or partiality of the judges, the technicalities oi the law, the dishonesty of the juries, and the dread of witnesses to tender their evidence, San Francisco, in 1851, was suffering from anarchy unparalleled in modern history. It was this social condition of the city that caused the organisation of that most remarkable society, the " Vigilance Committee," to which I have had occasion to allude in a former chapiter. This association was formed in June, 1851, " for the protection of the lives and property of citizens resident in the city of San Francisco." A council was appointed and a place of meeting fixed, while the tolling of the bell of the j\ronuniental Fire Engine Company was the signal for asscmldy. Although the " Vigilance Committee " has for several years now allowed the law of the land to take its 1 4% B I ':l I ■ 158 VIGILANCE COMMITTEE. Chap. VII. V ^) coiirse, it still exists, and is ready to assemble whenever the signal may be given. " What has become of your Vigilance Committee," I asked one of them when I was in San Francisco in October last. " Toll the bell, Sir, and you will see," was the reply. " Oh, then you are still under orders ? " " Always ready at the signal. Sir. If it were now given, you would see thousands at the meeting-place before the bell had ceased to sound." There is no doubt that this strange organisation exer- cised, and still exercises, a most wholesome restraint over a society that, but a few years since, elected a miner to be chief judge of the State, and whose two principal judges now go by the significant sobriquets of " Mammon " and " Gammon." The first proceeding of the committee in the summer of 1851 was to arrest, try, and hang four men, three of whom confessed their crimes, while the fourth was, I believe, undoubtedly guilty. The moral effect of this pro- ceeding was wonderful. All the other towns, which were rising all over the State, formed Vigilance Committees of their own. JVIany known ruffians, whose crimes could not be brought home to them, were ordered to leave the State; while others were kept in surveillance, and reported from Committee to Committee as they traversed the country. For years after this California was almost free of crime. Although by the greater number of the people the Vigilance Committee was held in favour, the officials and some others denounced it, and to this day stigmatise its existence as a disgrace to California. These termed themselves the " Law and Order " party ; but upon many occasions their weakness to restrain the mixed and dangerous population of San Francisco was made apparent. I have entered more fully into the history of San Francisco than I otherwise should have done, since I think a valuable and fair comparison may be drawn between these scenes and the peaceable course of British Columbia since the I ;l p. ! ;.4 m ■M '^Miiji ;..-- -«.''^''".- ■^^ INITKD STATICS 1)1 )f'KYA1!l), !\IAI!K ISLAND, SAN FRANCISCO. Piisrc l.'.H. Chap. VII. SECTIONAL DOCK. 15a discovery of gold there five years ago. The reader unac- quainted with tlio past liistory of California, would scarcely credit the fearful scenes through whidi she has reached her present growth. If San Francisco were the only city in California, its dimensions would not, perhaps, bo so surprising ; l)ut it is only one of many, almost as large and equally heuutiful, in the State. Sacramento, the seat of government, Stockton, and others, vie with it in size, while jMarysville, Benicia, Los Angelos, &c., are far more beautifully situated. After a few days' stay off San Francisco, we proceeded to ]\Iare Island, where the Government dockyard is established. Mare Island is 23 miles from San Francisco, across San Pablo Bay, and at the mouth of the Sacramento. Here wo were received by the American naval officers, and imme- diately put on the dock. It may be interesting to some of my readers if I here say something of a Sectional Dock, such as that we were now placed upon, and which, though generally used in America, is very little known, and still less liked, in this country. In a new country where there is plenty of timber, this kind of dock has one great advantage, in its cheapness and facility of construction, compared with the ordinary stone docks. But in California, where, as I have before said, there is very little timber, o "stone dock might have been constructed almost as cheaply The dock of which I am speaking had to be built at Pensacola, and then taken to pieces, and sent out to California at an expense, I was there told, of about 70,000 dollars (15,000?.) The Sectional Dock is composed of a series of sections, or iron tanks, each being fitted with a complete pumping- apparatus, elevated on a framework GO or 80 feet above the top of the tank. These tanks are fitted with gates, like the caissons used in English docks, so that they can .i ;*n: I ' I*' i if I J ■■ i *■;■ ■■ .Ut; 160 SECTIONAL T)OCK. Chap. VII. ntiM :Hii bo fillod, sunk, or again pumped out at ploasnro. A number of tlieso sections, varying according to the wciglit and Icngtli of tlio ship to be b'fted, are securely chained togetlier, and tlie whole is moored in water suHiciently deep to allow of their being suidc beneath the vessel's keel. Tliev are generally kept level with the water's edge; lait when a vessel is to b(( docked, they are sunk low enougli to allow her to come over the blocks which are placed ahmg the centre. The vessel is then hauled over the blocks, the pumps started, and, as she rises, shores from the sides of the tanks, and from the frames of the jjump-houses, are placed under her and against her sides, and she is gradually raised till her keel is out of the water. If proper care is taken, these docks are quite safe, but the ship must be placed cautiously on the blocks, or an accident is very likely to happen. In 18(J0 H.]\I.S. 'Termagant' was allowed to fall over in this dock, and was for some time in great danger. Her stern was allowed to rest on the edge of one of the sections, which, as her weight came upon it, rose up and turned over. This canted the ship, and she fell with her masts against the pump-houses. Fortunately she had only been raised a little way ; had she been further out of the water, she would probably have broken down the pump- houses, and very likely sunk. One advantage possessed by these docks is, that the ship being, as it were, raised into the air, there is better light for working at her bottom than in a stone dock. While at San Francisco we had, of course, many oppor- tunities of remarking tlwjse peculiar habits of manner and phraseology indulged in by the Americans. At Victoria, peopled as it is by Americans, we had been made familiar with them ; but here they were more commonly and glaringly used. Certainly, they justify anything that M\\ Dickens or other English satirists have written of them. Vmericans 3r- id lia, lar ly Ins Ins OiiAi'. VTI. AMKlilCAN nn?ASF:oi,(){JY. 161 ■^r: * all say — not, howovor, with [MTJcft truth — tliat these eccen- tricities hoh)ng only to th ' lower orders of so(!ioty. 1 hav«^ the pleasure of knowing botli American genth^nien and ladies quite free from tluur use; hut still I have met numy others, holding good positions in society, thoroughly '• Yankee " in tone and expression. These Americanisius must lose much of their hidicrous eftect by being written, as it is imp)ssible to give the tone and peculiar emphasis of the speaker, ^\'ords are often used by them to convey a sense entirely difterent to that which we apply to them. ^J'hus, *' I'll happen in directly " is considered rather a good expression for a contcm- l)latod visit. 80, " clever " does not imply any talent in the individual of whom it is spoken, but is said of a good-natured, gentlemanly man generally ; while " smart " answers for our " clever." Spt^aking to an American naval ofticer, just before leaving Victoria for San Francisco, he said, "Well, sir, " I guess you'll have quite an elegant time down there. Elegant place, sir, San Francisco." A very pretty young lady, living in Puget Sound, and happening to be on board the * Plumper,' said to one of the officers : " Well, sir, if you come over to Steilacoom, I guess you shall have a tall horsc;- baek ride ;" by which fonn of expression she meant to imply, not that the horse should be longer in the legs than is usual, but that care should be taken that the ride should be more than ordinarily agreeable. In a book on Americanisms, pub- lished last year, a Baltimore young lady is represented as jumping up from her seat on being asked to dance, and saying, " Yes, sirree ; for I have sot, and sot, and sot, till I've nigh tuk root ! " I cannot say I have heard anything (juite equal to this ; but I very well remember that at a party given on board one of the ships at Esquimalt, a young lady declined to dance a "fancy" dance, upon the plea, "I'd rather not, sir ; I guess I'm not fixed up for waltzing ;" — an expression the particular meaning of which must be left to readers of her o\sn sex to decide. An English young lady, M # 5 :i ill P M il n '<-k «!iJ 4^ f. i \ \¥ ; i: i: - from tlioir liabits of polygamy and inlioritaneo *'rom the ftmialo sido, too^otlier with tlio absence of any documentaiy or satisfactory o\i Jenoc of title. If, therefore, any one chief or tribe wore paid for a piece of land without the acknowledgment on the part of adjacent tribes of the vendor's right to the land sold, five or six other claimants would in all probability come forward asserting the land to be theirs, and founding their title to it upon some intermarriage of its former possessors. The difficulties aris- ing from the Indian custom of descent from the female sido are most perplexing. IMr. Weynton, of the Hudson Bay Company, who resided some years at Fort Rupert, told me he had known, on the death of a chief, a man from quite another tribe step in and take the chieftainship, without, so far as he could ascertain, anv close connection with the tribe he claimed to rule. Admiral Island, for instance, of which I am now speaking, would, in all probability, be claimed by no less than four tribes, viz., the Cowitchin, the Penalikut- son, a small tribe living among these islands, the Nanaimos, and Saanitch Indians. On the occasion of our present visit, the settlers, in reference to this subject, said the Indians had never been there before, and that they had established a villiige there for the sole pm'poso of asserting their claim to compensation for the land. Upon our telling one of them this, he pointed to a small stump by which we were stand- ing, and said it marked his father's grave, where ho had buried him three years ago — long before any white settler came to the place. From Nanaimo we went to the Qualicome River, from which a trail leads across the island to the head of the Aiberni Canal, which runs up from Barclay Sound on the west coast. Between Nanaimo and (Qualicome, and twenty miles from the former, is the magnificent harbt)ur of Nanoose. The Nauoose district, as the neighbourhood of this harbour is m 1 l-]6 JOURNEYS FKOM ALBETINI TO NANATMO. Cuai-. Vlil. 1 I called, contains a considerable quantity of very good land. In tlio course of a journey I made in the following year from the Alberni settlement to Nanaimo, I passed over this dis- trict, and found a large quantity of land well adapted for settlement. Some parts of it are rather light and stony, and there are a few swamps ; but the greater portion is rich black vegetable mould, lightly timbereil, and well watered by the Nanoose River, which runs into the harbour, and by several smaller streams. From Qualicome to Alberni the distance in a straight lino is only twelve miles, this being the nar- rowest part of the island, except at the very northern end, where Quatsinough Inlet runs in from the west side to within seven miles of Beaver harbour on the east, in which Fort Rupert is situated. In the year 1859 Captain Richards crossed the island from Qualicome to Alberni, before the settlement at the latter place was established, in company with one of the Hudson Bay Company's agents, who goes there every year to pur- chase sea-otter skins, &c., from the natives of the west side. Ho found that, after ascending the Qualicome River for some four or five miles and crossing a ridge 600 or 800 feet high, they came to a lake six miles long, called Home Lake. This they crossed in a canoe which the Indians kept there on purpose for Mr. Home, the Hudson Bay Company's agent, to make his annual trip in, and then, ascending the ridge at its western end, they looked down on the Alberni Canal five miles off. The ridge to the summit of which they ascended has since been named " Steep Ridge." It lies across the head of the Alberni, and the ascent from Home Lake to its summit was so steep that Captain Richards was convinced that, however well it might answer as a trail for foot-travellers, it could never be used as a roadway. In the summer following that of which I am now writing, and two years after Captain Richards had examined this route, we happened to be engaged in surveying Barclay Sound and CiiAP. Vllf. DILATOTUXESS OF INDIANS IN STARTING. KiT the Albcrni Canal. Tlio Governor liavinj^ expressed a groat desire to find a way of connecting tlie settlement then becoming established at Albemi with Nanaimo, by crossing the mainhmd instead of sailing round the island, I was instructed by Captain Kichards to ascertain whether a way existed across the island to Nanaimo by a valley that seemed to be more favourable for the purpose than that which he had previously traversed from Morne Lake. Al- thougli, as I have said, this journey did not take place till a year after the period of which I am now writing, it will perhaps be desirable to describe it here, since it relates to the part of the island now under consideration. On the 29tli April, 18G1, therefore, having made all neces- sary arrangements, we left the settlement at Alberni to make our way to Nanaimo, a distance as the crow flies of about 40 miles. Our party consisted of six Somass Indians, Mr. Bamfield, the Indian agent at Barclay Sound, and one lloyal jNFarine from H.M.S. ' Hecate." I have before spoken of the difficulty of effecting a start with Indians, and on this occasion more than ordinary trouble was experienced. It was still early spring, so that while the Indian's winter stock of provisions was exhausted, the berries upon which lie relied for sub- sistence were not yet in season ; and they were living from hand to mouth on what they could shoot and their daily haul of fish. The consequence of this was, that before I could induce any of the Indians to accompany us, I had to make arrangements for the provisioning of their wives during their abL.ence, and to give an undertaking that Captain Stamp, the gentleman in charge of the saw-mills, would see to their being provided with food if our journey to Nanaimo and back should chance to exceed the estimated time. I refused on this occa- sion to recognise more than one wife to each of the Indian guides, although I was aware that some had more ; but even this arrangement — which is, however, absolutely necessary — adds much to the expense and trouble of such journeys. I IfiS DILATORINESS OF INDIANS IN STAKTINO. Chap. VIII. After everything lias been settled, farewells eakl, and the packs distributed and arranged — always a matter of much •'onsideration — the mere process of getting under weigh will often occupy two or three hours. First, one fellow will make the discovery that he is not provided with " scaarlux " (breeches), and that he will be torn by the bushes. His want met, another will plead the need of mocassins, and although it is pretty certain he will make no use of them, a pair of shoes has to be found for him somehow. Powder and shot will next be applied for, and matches must be served out all round. When at last stirred by the strongest expressions of which the Chinook vocabulaiy is capable, some sort of a start is made, the leader will find that his mocassins are imperfectly laced, or his pack not perfectly balanced, or, if he happens to have his shoes on, he decides to take them off. Down he squats, the whole party follow- ing his example, and when you overtake them, you find them a few hundred yards from the starting-place, seated in a row, talking with the utmost animation and unconcern of the journey before them. Time, of course, they set no value on, and it is a great tiling to get two or thi-ee miles of a journey over in the first day, or even to camp for the night at a suffi- cient distance from their village. The stalling over, how- ever, and once fairly in the bush, all goes well enough. Upon this occasion, however, our difficulties did not end with the first night's camping, for our journey lay through a country over which none of the Indians had ever travelled. After their fashion, therefore, they declared it to be impene- trable, and but for one old hunter, who supported and expressed a determination to follow me, I do not think I should have induced them to remain with me. As it was we had not proceeded far on the second day's journey wJien one of the Indians complained of being ill, and desired to return. He was evidently ill, but it would never have done to have allowed one of them to turn back just then, so I proceeded to Chap. VIII. AN ELK SHOT. ino abuse him to tlic full extent of my knowledge of Cliinook. U'ibmidiiig liiiu with being " ciirqua klootcluman," — *' like a woman,"— and iinally dismissing him with a note of explanation to Captain Stamp, in \^hieh I said that I was sorry he slionld have sent a woman instead of a man with rae. I took eare to read this note out aloud, and it had the desired effect of mailing him ashamed, and the others laugh ; w heieupon tlie sick man shouldered his load and completed the journey without anoth(jr word of complaint. By noon of this day (30tli) we had crossed the steep ridge which lies across the head of the canal, by a patli much lower than that which Captain Kichards had taken coming from Home Lake. The ascent, indeed, was so gradual as to offer no obstacle to the construction of a road. Having descended by the other side, which was somewhat steeper, we came upon a beautiful stream, 40 or 50 yards wide, running to the north- ward. Following this stream, we fell across some herds of elk (wapiti), one of which I fortunately brought down, after my head Indian had made two or three unsuccessful shots. I say fortunately, for nothing raises a stranger more in the estima- tion of the Indians than skill with the riile ; and as I managed next day to shoot two deer through tlie head, it raised their opinion of me immensely, and made them follow my instruc- tions much more readily than they might otherwise have done. It would astonish one unacquainted with Indians on a campaign like this, to note the expedition with which an elk, larger than a cow, is reduced to a skeleton. As I have before mentioned, a quarter of an hour suffices to accomplish tliis result, including the process even of turn- ing its skin into mocassins. The prime cuts — those along each side of the saddle, and affording two strips of meat five or six feet long, and four inches thick, belonging of right to me as the leader of the party — w<}re sewn up in a piece of the elk's skin and slung on the chief Indian's pack. The rest of the deer's flesh was then divided, and its skin laced on M 170 A FORTUNATE ESCAPE. Chai'. VII f. to their fnet, in the way I have before described, with extra- ordinary despatch. After another hour's walk we halted under a largo tree to smoke a pipe, before crossing a piece of swamp which lay just ahead of us. I had leant my gun against a tree — I carried it myself just then, in the hope of getting another sliot at an elk — and was striking a match, when I saw the old hunter leap up with an abrupt ejaculation, and commence tearing the cover off his gun in great haste.. Seizing mine, and looking about to see what was the matter, a large black bear jumped down from the tree under wliich we had been sit- ting, and made off with all speed into the bush. With my gun to my shoulder I swung round upon my heel after him, when Mr. Bamfield, in his eagerness to get a shot at the bear, starting up, placed his head within a few inches of the muzzle of my weapon, and nothing but a sharp instinctive jerk which I gave it upward prevented his receiving the contents of the barrel. It was a fortunate escape for him, for me, and for the bear, who, in the confusion which followed, made his escape, much to the disappointment of the Indians, who prefer bear- meat to elk at this season, and would have thrown away their stock of venison for it. Proceeding, we soon came to a small lake about three miles long, of the existence of which no one of the Indians had any idea. As we had been on low land, or through thick wood all the way, I was rather puzzled to make out whereabouts Mount Arrowsmith, the position of which was well determined in our charts, was, and somewhat inadvisedly invited a discussion of the question before the Indians. I had all along been steering by a pocket-compass, which the Indians looked upon with great awe, and which I insisted, whenever I found them wavering, showed me the way to Nanaimo. My doubts as to the whereabouts of Mount Arrowsmith were therefore an admission of ignorance which it was rash of me to make ; for one curious, observant old fellow, whom we had christened Wat Tyler, from a likeness he bore ClIAP. VIII. IJEACII NANAIMO. 171 to Mr. Bamfield's ideal of that porsonnj^o, immcdiatoly pro- pounded the troublesome problem — " If the compass showed me the way to Nanaimo, why did it not show me wlu^re the mountain was?" I had to explain that the compass, bein<^ bound for Niinaimo, declined to trouble itself with any other consideration. We walked along the beach for about half the length of the lake, when the Indians propt)sed making a raft to continue our journey on. As it was near camping-time, and I did not know how much farther the lake extended, avo halted and commenced making tlie raft to proceed upon next morning. It proved fortunate that we did so, as it saved us a scramble over steep rocks, and round one or two points which would have proved by no means easy or pleasant travelling. At the east end of the lake, which was not more than three miles and a half long, and which we reached after a wet, cold journey on tho. raft we had constructed during the night, we found another considerable river running to the northward through the gorge, up which a road could be carried with no great difficulty. We did not follow this stream, but crossed the ridge on the right of it, and descended on its north side, the Gulf of Georgia opening before us. This was the 1st of May, and from that till the afternoon of the 3rd, having crossed to the east coast of the island, we passed over land most of which would be admirably adapted for settlement, quite equal, indeed, to the already settled Saanitch district, although not so good, perhaps, as some other parts of the island, particularly at Komoux, of which I shall have to speak presently. Most of it was level, and lightly timbered; in some parts, indeed, the soil was light and swampy, but, as a rule, it was a dark, rich vegetable mould. It will be remem- bered that I am speaking now of the east coast of the island between Qualicome and Nanoose. On the 3rd, at 1 p.m., we made the sea, a few miles from Nanoose Harbour, and, I.;. I' I- 172 URTHKN TO ALBKHNF. Chap. VIII. i'', "••» \ U skirting it, lield directly for Nanaimo, which wo reached next day at 5 p.m. Tho Nanaimo people were very much surprised at our appearance, and delighted to hear so good a report of the way we had travelled by. We remained there till the 7th, on which day we set out on our return journey to Alberui. Three of the Indians who had accompanied me suffered so much from swollen feet and legs that I was obliged to leave them behind, finding, luckily, as many Nanaimoa willing to take their place. I intended to return by an entirely different route to that which we had taken in coming, and accordingly pushed inland at once from Nanaimo, keeping behind Nanoose Harbour altogether. We found a great deal of excellent laud in the valley of the Nanoose River, which flows from the southward into the head of Nanoose Harbour ; so that I am able to affirm that the whole country between the Qualicome Eiver and Nanaimo is fair, and in parts excellent. At Nanoose we nearly struck our old route, and* having found that Mounts Arrowsmith and ]\[oriarty, that lay before us, and between which I had lK)ped to pass, were united by a high, snow-covered ridge, held for the lake, recrossed it by means of the raft, which we found where it had been left, and reached the settlement at Alberni at ten in the morning of the 12th May. Though the difficulties of making a road across the island were not insuperable, or even great, yet the Governor was disappointed at those which I rei)orted to exist, he having been under the impression that there was little to prevent a waggon-road being at once laid down. This, however, will seldom be found practicable in this country. I think I am safe in asserting that road-making is the hardest and most expensive work in the colony ; for when there are not hills to be scaled,, there are woods and swamps to cross ; and where these are wanting, rapid rivers and streams will be found that require bridging. As yet no road has been constructed "- »yj2_(^ Chap. VIII. COURTKNAY HIVKIJ. ovon between Victoria and Nanaiiuo, the main obstaolo to which is tlio lack of money in the colonial treasury.* When this is (lone we may hope for communication across the islanrl to the Alberni, which I think should be carried uj* from that place through the Nanooso Valley, and then along the coast, a branch turning into Cameron Lake and Alberni, and the main road continuing up the east side of the island to Comax, Salmon Kiver, IJeaver Cove, and Fort Itnpert — in all of which districts there is much good land, of which I shall presently speak. Let us now, however, nsturn to the * Plumper,' and accompany her from Qnal iconic, where we left her at anchor. On the 13th April wo weighed, and steamed up Baynes Sound, between Denraan Island and Vancouver, anchoring in Henry Bay, at the north end of the former. From this place our party pushed on to Cape ]\[udge, at the south end of Discovery Passage, to prepare the way for the ship; while Dr. Wood and I went to examine the land about the Courtenav liiver, which eni[)ties itself into the head of Baynes Sound. This portion (jf the island, which is known as the Komoux, or Comax district, had been partially examined before ; but although wo had been informed that there was some fine land there, the extent and beauty of what we saw quite suiinised us, and wo both agreed this was the most promising s[)ot for an agricid- tnral settlement we had yet seen on the island. The Courtenay River runs into Augusta Bay, at the head of Baynes Soimd, and here we found what is of the utmost importance in prospecting for a settlement, viz., good and safe anchorage for ships of almost any size. At the rivers' mouths are sands, which dry off to some considerable distance, and in winter are covered with flocks of ducks, geese, and other wild fowl. The stream for about a mile is perfectly 'tin », * Since writing tlio alxivo ii bill has l)een bronglit before the Ilonao of Atisembly for the construction of a road between these places ; the bill wiia most unwisely, rejectetl, and one for a mule-truil grunted. 174 COUKTENAY RIVER, CiiAi'. viir. ! ) nnvif^iiMo for largo boats at liigli-wator, or even for small stoni-whocl steamers ; although tlio land on tho left bank being quitch clear and level from outside tho river's mouth, it is unnecessary to have steamers, or even bateaux there. At tho point Avhero it becomes unnavigable, tho Courte- nay — which as far as wo examined runs nearly parallel with tho coast — is joined by a river, called by tho natives the " Puntluch," which flows from the south-west through a deep valley, and probably takes its rise in the great central lake, from which tho Soraass Kiver runs down on the west side of the island into tho Alberni Canal. We did not go up this stream, the Indians reporting that there was no good land upon its banks, and that the bush was very thick. Landing from tho canoe just above the Forks of the Puntluch and Courtenay (or Tzo-o-oom, as the Indians call it) Rivers, and on the left bank of the latter, wo found ourselves in the middle of a large prairie, which we discovered continued in a north- westerly direction, or parallel with the coast, for eight or ton miles. The Courtenay flows nearly through the centre of this, and there are one or two smaller streams, wliich water the whole abundantly. The ground slopes upwards from the river on both sides, so as to prevent the possibility of over- flow to any extent. Tho whole of this prairie is bounded by dense wood, forming a shelteruig coast-fringe on the east, and affording plenty of timber on all sides (except towards the entrance from Baynes Sound) for building, burning, &c. It took us a day and a half to walk over this land, through which a plough might be driven from end to end. We tried to penetrate the forest at the northern end, in hopes of finding some more clear land beyond, but the Indians said they did not know of any in that direction ; and as our time was limited, we retraced our steps. I have no doubt, how" ever, but more good land will be found to lie between this point and the valley of the Salmon Eiver, which is 60 miles north of it. The Indians at Salmon River told us that they Chai'. VIII. IJOMAN CATHOLIC PIIIKS'IS. 1 <•» could go by land from tlicro to Komoux in u day and a lialf ; and this, if true, proves that tho bush oarniot bo very thick. \\\) i'ound tho p'onnd on tho west bank of tho Courtcnay nearly as i^ood as that on tlio east. The soil, indeed, apjieared f|nito cfpial to it, but it is not so level. ^^^' estimated tlie clear land hero altop^ether at 7000 or 8000 acres. Th(^ Indians told us that a gi-eat many blankets would be wanted for tho purchase of this tract, as all tho neighbourinj^ tril)es resorted there in the summer-time to collect berrv's, shoot deer, catch lish, &c., all of which wore found in lar<^e quan- tities. Indeed, they showed some reluctance at takin<^ ns over it, feeling sure, no doubt, that wo should desire to possess it when its qualities became known. Rejoining the sliip after two days' absence, on the 20th wo started for a small harbour inside Capo Mudgo, whence to commence surveying operations up the Strait. While in Henry IJay wo witnessed tho arrival of some Roman Catholic priests, which caused the greatest excitement among tho natives. They were scattered in all directions, fishing, ^r. — many on board and around tho ship — when a canoe, with two largo banners living, appeared in sight. Immediately a shout was raised of " Le Pretro ! Le Pretre ! " and they all paddled on shore as fast as they could to meet them. There were two priests in tho canoe, and in this way they travelled, visiting in turn every village on tho coast. A fortnight afterwards, when I was in Johnstone Strait with a boat-party, I met them again. It was a pouring wet day, cold, and blowing hard, and they were apparently very lightly clothed, huddling in the bottom of their canoe, the Indians paddling laboriously against wind and tide to reach a village by night, and the sea washing- over them, drenching them to the skin. I never saw men look in a more pitiable plight. They had a little map with them, and asked me to show them whore they were, of which they appeared to have a very hazy idea. One of their men had shot a deer, which they were delighted to exchange ■t*—- t "mxA 170 CATK MUIKJE — SEYMOnn NAIUIOWS. Ciiaiv VIII. for sonic biscuit, of whicli tlioy luul niii vory short. CVrtuinly if misery on this curth will ho ('()ni|)(;nHato(l for ht'roaftcr, those two priests wore hiyinfi; in u i>lcntiful stoek of liiipjiiuess. Tho lioman Catholic elers — and work under tlu^ direction of jM. Demers, the Konian Catholic liishop of Victoria. They arc thorough masters of Chinook, have the art of making themselves understood and feared by the Indians, and undoubtedly i)ossc8s considerable influence ovei- them. Coming out at the north end of Riynes Sound, and round- ing Cape Lazo, Capo jMudge — so named by Vancouver, after his lieutenant, the late Admiral Zachariah ]\[udge — appears like an island in tho middle of tho Gulf, presenting a high, steep face to tho southward; though as it is approached, shoals will be found extending from it a long way. This part of the Gulf of Georgia forms a sort of playground for tho waters, in which they frolic, utterly regardless of all tidal rules. This is caused by the collision of the streams which takes place here ; the flood-stream from the south, through the Strait of Fuca, and up the Haro Arcliipelago, being met by that from Queen Charlotte Sound and Johnstone and Discovery Straits. The tide-rips caused by the conflict between these opponent streams are excessively dangerous to boats, and great care has to bo exercised in crossing. These tide-rips exist to some extent in all parts of these imier waters, but they are certainly more dangerous here than anywhere else. A boat getting into them is almost certain to be swamped ; and even a ship is so twisted and twirled about as to run considerable risk, if the passage is ut all narrow, of being forced on the rocks or beach. Fifteen miles above Cape JMudge, Seymour Narrows, at the south end of Discovery Strait, are reached. These narrows are only 900 yards wide, and as the stream turns almost CiiAP. VIII. IlAriD AND UNCKHTAIN fTRnFA'TS. 17 instantaneously in tluMn, tlicn* is an incessant turnjoil and bubhh; gdin^'on. On the ^londay after wo moved from Uayiies Sound to (^uatliiosky ( 'ove. just inside ( 'ape IMud'Lrt', IV-ndcr and 1 started for tliese narrows. I had to st()[> at tliem wliil«^ lio was {j'.injj further on for a distan f -lO or "jO nnles. W'c pulled up to them with the youn;jf ebb: my boat keepini; eloso insh(»i< to prevent its bein^ carried thronj^h ; Tender in tiio mid-stream. Ah wo approached we matched his boat quicken- ing Iter pace every second. When close to the entrance wo shot into a little pool of still water, and jinnpiii;jr on a rock I was just in time to see him .shoot throut^h at a trernefirf>«»us speed, laying on his oars, for tliey were quite useless, au^J flying up the Strait. In about an hour from the time wo parted he had reached Point Chatham, about J.") miles up. This is very well so long as a bout is going with the stream, but when working against it it is i.ot so ]>leasant, particu- larly if, as frequently happens, a strong winarts of the valley, h u II i W B ■''■ •« J 98 OVERLAND TO TORT PEMBERTON. Chap. IX. h i and many potato-grounds ; and lie described the soil as being very rich. There is no trail to his village from the Sound, as they always use the river ; but as tho ground is quite level and in many parts clear, one could be easily constructed. The only ascent which would have to be made between this and Port Pemberton is to the summit of a si>ur which sepa- rates the Tseearkamisht and Squawmisht liivers, and which we crossed the day after I left the village. From this summit the whole way is by a gradual descent. There would be no difficulty in carrying a road over this at an easy grade. From the descrij)tion of IVIr. McKay, an Hudson Bay Com- pany's officer, who traversed the other side of this spur up the valley of the Tseearkamisht, that route would seem to be even easier than the one I passed t>ver. For about 400 feet perhaps the path^we took was rather steep ; but, from the general appearance of the ground, I am confident a more easy grade could be found. We reached the summit by noon ; and for the whole of the rest of the day our path lay through a gorge by the side of a stream, till, about six o'clock, we passed round a small hill, and came to a little lake, called by Mr. McKay, Daisy Lake. Here we camped for the night. Some of the ground over which we had passed during the day was rather rough ; but after the travelling we had experienced between Jer^^s Inlet and Howe Sound, it was pleasant enough; and, as I was by this time beginning to feel veiy much fatigued, the prospect of an easy journey to Pemberton, in which I was not disappointed, was very agreeable. Next morning (14th) we crossed a low ridge, and imme- diately came upon the Tseearkamisht River, which flows on the other side of it. This river here runs through a large basin, which appeared as if it had been lately inun- dated ; and indeed had it not been for the dead trees still standing in it, I should have taken it for the bed of a lake from which the water ^had lately receded. Though the river ii l..)L IX. CuAi'. IX. OVERLAND TO POUT PEMBKRTON. 1!>5) ii itself was here 50 yards wide, the uumber of dead trees, whieh completely blocked it up at this point, made a capital floating bridge, and enabled us to cross cpiite easily. Wo then walked along the basin, which we found to be composed of sand covered with boulders of trap and granite for two miles, wlien we came to that part where the river still over- flowed its banks. The apj)earance of the country here was most remarkable. The trees were many of them very large, and the water, though lower than it had been, still stood six or eight feet up their trunks, giving them the ai»pearance of a forest growing in water. As wo advanced, a still more curious sight presented itself, for the trees having been burned by one of those fires so common in the bush, stood up all black and charred in the flood, looking as if tliore had been a struggle between fire and water for the mastery, in which both might claim a victory. ^Vllile speaking of fii'e in the bush, 1 may mention that in former years — for it decreases yearly as the trees are cut down — these fires were so common along the coast as to cause a smoke all over the Straits that had the effect of a fog, and made them as difficult of navi- gation as in the thickest winter weather. From this point to our journey's end the way had been travelled previously by Mr. IVIcKay, an officer of the Hudson Bay Company, whose name I have already mentioned. He had, however, gone the opposite way to that which I took, having started at Port Pemberton and from the Daisy Lake, following the Tseearkamisht down, while I had come up the Squawmisht. He consequently reached Howe Sound by the east side of the large valley mentioned at its head, while I went up the west ; and as, on comparing notes with him, I found he thought the side he took to be as good as mine, there can be little doubt of the favourable quality of the land there. After proceeding along the east bank of the river for six miles we came to a small canon ; and about two miles 3S 200 HEAVY THUNDEUSTOKM. Chap. IX. at f fH ' in ti 5U beyond this again crossed the river on dead trees, and canipod. This canon could be easily avoided by a bridge built a little below it : it is of very small extent, the river being narrow, and the bank on the o})posite side low and level. A five-mile Avalk next morning brought ns to a lake which we found to extend, with an average breadth of one mile, about 10 miles in a north-easterly direction. Finding the Indians knew' no name for it^ I called it " Green Lake," from the remarkably green colour of the water. This was a very pleasant spot ; and coming upon a shady tree, with good grass growing beneath it, we halted for breakfast, and waited till noon to got a latitude. We then kept along its west bank to the liead where there was a small patch of swamp, and cross- ing this, we came upon a fine beaten trail leading through a pleasant valley, which we kept till night. During the night we experienced one of the heaviest thunderstorms I ever hoard in the bush. It was raining a little when we turned in, but there were no very threaten- ing indications of storm, although, doubtless, had we been in the open instead of among very large trees, where we could hardly see any sky, we should have been more prepared for it. As it was, about midnight we were awakened by a crash like the falling of an immense number of large trees, although the bright flash which almost instantly shot across the door of the tent showed us its cause. j\Iy poor crew suffered badly this night. The rain fell in torrents, putting out their fire, and drenching them thoroughly ; and through I soon dozed off again, their idea of supernatural agency in thunder and lightning, which I have mentioned when speaking of Indians generally, kept them awake all night ; and whenever I was roused by a particularly loud clap or a brighter flash than usual, I heard their shouts of terror or excitement mingling with the thunder's reverberation. In the forest depths a storm of this kind is certainly a most awful and im- ft Chap. IX. MOUNTAIN LAKES. 201 posing speotacle. The clnp of the thunder rings so much more than in an open space, while tlie reverberation eontinues through the forest with a succession of loud, sharp cracks like a number of distinct reports of cannon. A storm, too, appears so much nearer to you in the depth of a forest than when you see it on the plain. I have often stepped suddenly back into my tent when I have been watching it, fancying for the moment that the fork would strike the vi.'ry spot on which I was standing, so vividly has the jagged line of light flashed across my face. The expression of fear on I ho Indians' faces on these occasions is beyond descrii>tion ; they almost grow white through the coating of dirt on their skins ; and you can never get them to move about alone while the storm continues. Next day we continued our march in no very comfortable plight, every one and every thing wet through. As the sun rose, however, bright, clear, and warm, "the past night appeared like a dream, for, except a few freshly-fallen trees and broken branches, no traces of the wild disturbance of the elements were seen. Our course all this day lay along the centre of a thickly-timbered valley with two or three small hills in it. Ascending one of these, about nine o'clock we saw the liil- loett River four or five miles off, coming in from the westward between very high precipitous mountains, and beyond these appeared the snow-capped peaks, which, according to the Indians, surround the mountain lakes, in which, as I have said, the Lilloett, Squawmisht, Clahoose, J3ridge, and other rivers take their rise. They describe it as a basin, very high up, containing four or five small lakes, in which rise all the larger rivers watering this part of the country. We soon came upon the Lilloett River, and followed its right bank till night, when we crossed one arm of it by an Indian bridge made over a fall of 200 or 300 feet, and there camped. We had crossed two or three steep mountain- shoulders during the latter part of the day, as this coui-se m } tA iw ; /% '''If '^, ^ ^hU 202 MOSQLITOS. Chai'. IX. li shortened the tlistanco, and was preferahle to koepin*^ the vaihjy on account of the density of tlie bush there. A tra- veller will find that Indians always prefer the monntain-sido to traversin*,' a valley, so that, in examining with them a line of country for a road, you hardly ever pass over the exact gi'ound through which it would be can'ied. This should always be borne in mind in considering an Indian's r(^port of any route, as, exce^tt where it crosses high mountains or rivers, his description would not convey to a road-cutter u very good idea of the work before him. It afforded me no small gratification when we halted that night to feel that it was our last out for this trip, and that we should be at Port Pemberton in good time next day. The way, after passing the Squawmisht, was certainly much easier than before ; but travelling without a white com- panion is always very dull work ; and for the last day and a half the mosquitos Imd become almost intolerable, worse indeed than I had ever before known them to be even in British Columbia. Fortunately I had a small mosquito-net, which the Doctor had >\isely insisted upon bringing, or I do not know what I should have done. Whenever we halted I hung this on cross sticks, and, getting inside, tucked it about me. When tea Avas ready, it was handed in to me under the net, watch being kept that none of the enemy entered with it. The poor Indians suffered terribly, though they coated them- selves with a mixture of oil and mud. At stalling they had warned us that the " quileemuck " (mosquitoes) would kill us all when we got to the Lilloett ; and they certainly did their best to effect that purpose. Before we left the ship we had head-bags made of crape, and these were the only things that kept us from being devoured while we were walking. These were long veils which were fastened round the top of our straw hats, and tied in at the neck. We even went so far as to have small cane hoops inserted in them to keep them off the face. But these only answered in clear CirAP. IX. LILT.Ol'VrT MEADOWS. 203 land, of which we fonnd very httle on this trip. In tho hnsh tlie hoops were always oatfhing tlio houghs of trees and tear- ing. The moment tlie hag toucliod your face you were hitten througli it : tho mosquitoes making nothing of any such trifling ohstruction as tho net of which it is eom- pt)sed. Indeed it was said by some of tho officers engaged on the Boundary expeditions, tliat the mosquitoes were known to bite through two blankets! It should bo said, however, that these plagues are only met with in these woods and on the liower Frasor. The country above Fort Hope, for instance, is free, or almost free from them. And wherever the country is cleared they disappear. At Westminster, for example, they have become much less trouldesome since tho site of the town was cleared, although their disap])earance cannot bo looked for until the thick bush, which still hedges in tho city closely, shall have yielded to the axes of the settlers. In Vancouver Island they are almost unknown. An hour's walk on the following morning brought us to the top of a hill from which we looked down on the Lilloett Meadows. A small lake, at certain seasons nearly dry, lay at our feet, and before us, for some miles east and west, dotted at long intervals with log huts — the ripe corn surrounding them, and the long hay which grew all over the plain sending up a delicious perfume — lay the Lilloett Meadows. Through them flowed tho river, which came from the high rugged mountains in the east, where the fertile country ended. It was lovely weather, calm and bright as July mornings always are here, and the scene was most at- tractive and* beautiful. Our sense of its charms was not a little heightened perhaps by the few signs of civilization before us, and the sight far off of the thin white smoke which told where the huts which constitute the important city of Pemberton, whither we were bound, lay. Descending to the little lake, we obtained a canoe from a I m t '.^', iii^ 204 REACH rORT PEMRERTON. Chap. IX. ,•*. i' If hut on the opposite side, and paddled across it, and for about a couple of miles down the main stream of the Lilloett. From this we walked four or five miles {H-ross the meadowg, passing on our way several settlers gathering in their liarvest, until we came to the river again. Obtaining another canoe there, we paddled down to Pemberton, which we reached at noon. The settlers wliom I saw on the Luloct . Meadows spoke very highly of the !?oil, and the crops looked extremely fine. All were very busy building huts, sawing timber, and gathering in their summer crops. At Port Pemberton I found little or no alteration since I was there a year before. True it was somewhat startling, when I made inquiries for a boat that crossed the lake, to be told that the steamer had gone over that morning, and would not return till the following day. I was unwilling, however, to await its arrival ; and, having my own crew of Indians, I obtained the loan of a canoe, and we paddled across the lake, leaving our boat to be towed back by the steamer in the morning. The steamer was certainly not an imposing craft, being a mere wretched little tub 40 or 50 feet long, with no attempt at fittings. However, it was a great thing to find a steamer there at all ; and I have no doubt she answered the purpose for which she was intended very well. Since that time steamers have been placed upon the other lakes of the Hur- rison-Lilloett route, and a considerable saving of time and expense in the journey to the Upper Fraser has been thus effected. We camped at the north end of the Little Lilloett, or Tenass, Lake, and next morning, as I heard the Engineers' camp was only a few miles further, I determined to push on there, in hopes of getting some change of diet, being rather tired of the bacon and dampers, of which, moreover, we had been on short allowance for two or three days Chap. IX. PORT DOUGLAS. 205 before reaching Port Pemberton. I should liavo mentioned before — as a very favourable trait of the Indians who were with me — that when we ran short of flour, as we did during the last day or so of our journey, they would not eat any of the dampers, saying that I needed them, and that they could live quite as well on berries. Fortunately there was plenty of tea, and when we reached Pemberton, I was careful to recompense them for their unselfish thought of me. Reaching the Engineers' camj), I was at once provided with a bed, and a good breakfast of bread-and-butter and mutton-chops, which I ate with a relish which must remain unknown to those to whom fortune denies the preliminary dis- cipline of rusty bacon and dampers. After breakfast I started for Port Douglas, the doctor from the camp accompanying me. Here the change was, indeed, great since my last visit. Then the traveller scrambled over this jjortage by a wretched trail, carried, quite unnecessarily, over the steepest hills and roughest places. Now, however, we were journeying along a waggon-road which would be no discredit to many parts of England. This had been, however, a work of great expense, costing at least 500?. a mile. A contract was afterwards entered into for the c utting of the succeeding porbige from Port Pemberton to Anderson Lake, at 250?. per mile ; but the contractor failed completely. Upon this fine hard road — a rare treat after the walking we had lately had — the Indians were no match for us, and when we reached the four-mile house from Douglas, they were so far in the rear, and it was getting so late, that wo decided to halt there for the night. Next morning we crossed *' Sevastopol," as the steep hill which lies behind Douglas is named, and reached the port. Douglas, too, had improved somewhat within the year wliich had elapsed since I had seen it. The restaurants were decidedly better, and things gene- rally cheaper. The saw-mill in the gully leading down the robably have had great diOiculty in inducing them to give up this slave. The stand they made in the presence of so much force was very signiiicant of the attachment wilh which they cling to this among other habits of their restless, pre- datory lives. 'I'he old chief's * is, 212 A in^SCUEl) SLAVE. f'liAi'. TX. ?! ! '5 i'ou(l(;r liim imfit to be dvalt \vitli at jji-esint by stern and iniyiekling men of war, nnless his destruction bo contem- plated, wliicli of course is not. ' Tlien,' asked tlic cai)tain, ' why do not more men come out, since your mission has been so successful ; or, if the missionary societies cannot afford them, why does not Government send leasMnter work than rou^diing it in the bush ; for, instead of cuttini;- down cverythinj^ to the smallest possible limit, you aro able to carry numy comforts with you. A large bell-tent accommo- dates the men, and, if you have a roomy boat, yoii will pro- bably take a small tent for yourself also. In addition to those, a canteen, a box, fitted for holding cups, plates, knives, and forks ; tins for tea and coffee, and bottles for grog, if you take any, are requisite. The same stock of clothes for boat and bush excursion is necessary, the crew washing theirs on Sunday. Objections are sometimes made to this work being done on that day, and Saturday evening is recommended for the iiuri>ose, — when the men are likely to be so tired as to neglect the task. The bush, however, is so thick ordinarily, that it rarely hai)i)ens that the tent is pitched in a s])ot where the men can get a walk on the Sunday morning ; and I think this emjiloyment before prayer-time very useful. The daily routine of life in the boats differs, of course, very much from that in the bush. Instead of Avorking before breaktast the day begins with that meal. Ureakfast over, the boats aro launched or unmoored, and o})eratioits begun for the day at an hour depending a great deal upon the work to be got through, and ranging generally from to 8. About noon — or as near to that time as an ap})ro- priate spot for the meal was reached — we halted for dinner, and, resting for an hour, continued our work until the evening, taking care, however, to get our tent pitched and boats moored before dark. It was always necessaiy to keej) vV >-!.J',1 21(1 DAILY IKjUTINK, ClIAl'. IX. m. a watcli nil iii;j;lit, ns some IndiiiiiH were i»retty Hure to be lurking about in tlio nei^Hiboiirliood on tlie look-ont for a eliance ol' tliieving. ^Vhcn among; the northern tribes, also, there was always some fear, more or less, of th(?ir attacking us. I remember, when we llrst began work in IiS.jS, paying for my neglect of watch-keejting with the loss of a time luissccl Itlcivsantly niul swiftly. On 3I(»ii(lay tli(3 loth wo prooocdcd down the Strait mid roachcd Toint Cliatlmm on the loth, the only thin^ wo had to t'omplaiii of bciiif,' the weather. Jt rained constantly, and at such short intervals that thero was no time to tret our things dry between the showers. In ijoin^' down .lohnstone Strait wo met Mr. Downie, in his sehooner, on his way to ICni^ht Inlet. ][o had shortly before diseovered plumbu^o thero, and was on his way for a cargo of it, which was, ho ho|>ed, to make his fortune. lie gave us some newspaiiers and a sui>i>ly of ai>i)les, which were by no means unacceptable. Wo passed Capo 3lndg(; on the ir)th, and reached the little island of ]\littlenatch, which lies six or eight miles oft' it, by night, and thero spent our second Sunday. The ' Shark ' had not been able to reach the island, and had been oldiged to seek shelter elsewhere, from which, howev(;r, sho was subsequently driven by a gale that sprang up. We picked Ikt up on jMonday ; and having put a mark on Savary Island, wo proceeded together to Texhada Island, which wo reached the same evening, remaining here all Tuesday (bStli), and reaching the entrance of IL^we Sound on Wed- nesday. Leaving the 'Shark 'to take soundings about the entrance, I started for its head, being desirous, if I could get a canoe, to ascend the Stpiawmisht River, and reach the village which wo had visited when on the way from Jervis Inlet to Port Pembcrton. licaching the mouth of the river on the morning of the IJUtli, we found the village there deserted by all save one old man and a little boy. I was beginning to despair of getting up the river, when to my great delight, Peter, the chief of the village I wished to go to, made his ap[)earance. Ho had heard of our arrival, and had dro})ped down the stream from his temporary villager about two miles up, wheie he was fishing, to set' who we were. He imme- I t S T t ■I ll I ■fC -;i- ,*' i* k . * i 218 ASCEND THE SQUAWMISHT IN A CAXOE. Chap. IX. ** ji' .t 11 ,1, J iliiitely rocognised me and agrood to take mo up t)n the following day. Accordingly, having selected a good i)laco to leave the boat in, I started next morning with Peter and three other Indians np the river. As I have spoken of this river in the beginning of the chapter, I will only say now that we reached the village that evening ; and as it poured with rain all night and not a star showed itself in the heavens, I was glad to sleep in I*eter's lodge and wait for the sun next day. Here I experienced the hospitality I liave always received from Indians when alone with them. They cleared everything out of one end of the large hut, and put a barrier across, so that no children or dogs could come near me, and kept my fire alight all night. The children certainly were models of quietness ; for although there were no fewer than iJO or 40 in the lodge, I hardly heard a sound all night. Altogether there were 50 or GO men, women, and children in the place ; but, except an occasional bark by one of the dozen dogs who slept under the same roof, and who was probably chasing a deer in his dreams, not a sound disturbed me. Dropping down the river next day, and rejoining the boat at P.M. on the following morning, we started down the Sound, and after a few days' cruise — which, with the b(jat- trip altogether, would have been pleasant enough but for the constant rain — reached Estpimalt. liemaining some time in harbour — during which several changes among the other vessels took place, and we hoisted the garland * for the second time during our cruise, in honour of the marriage of our first lieutenant — we started on the 13tli for our last cruise in the old 'rium})er' to Howe Sound. We remained here, struggling against the rain and * It is 1!r' custom on lioard iiicn-oi-war to lioist a garlaiul of flowirs to tlie inast-licail, hutwecn biiiiviso and suusit, wlicu a wedding takes plaee among the olliceiti. Chap. IX. AURIVAL OF THE ' IIECxVTE.' 210 wind that did its best to convince us that tlie time liad arrived for giving up work for tlie winter, until the 2St]i, when we went to New Westminster, where wo remained until the 1st of November. Crossing the Gulf to Xanaimo for coal, we proceeded to Esquimalt, where we commenced our winter chart-work and made preparations for turning over to the ' Hecate,' whicli we knew luid left England in June last, and might arrive at any moment. On the 14th we were much shocked by the sudden death of poor Bull, our master and senior assistant-surveyor. His death was quite unexpected, and cast a gloom over us all. It was but ton months since he had been married, and had built himself a house near the harbour, where ho died without the slightest warning or previous illness. On the day previous to his death he had been working with us all at the office. On the 12th of December a requisition was sent by the Governor for a vessel to go to Nootka Sound, to see what assistance could bo rendered to a Peruvian brigantine which was on shore there, a message having been sent by the crew that they expected hourly to be killed by the natives. As almost invariably happens in these cases, it proved that the wliite men had provoked an attack — one of them threatening to cho]) an Indian down with his axe. At the same time we heard that one or two other vessels had been lost on the coast in tlie heavy gales which had prevailed since the beginning of November. Accordingly on the 10th, the 'Forward' was sent out to hunt up the wreck, Browning, one of our second masters, going in her as pilot. On the 23rd of December H.JM.S. 'Ilecato' made her a[)p('arance, and it may be fancied how eagerly we all hurried on board to see what our new home was like. We were greatly delighted with the change, for though possessing no external l)oautv, she was very roomv and comfortable II I I f i I i I I 220 OUR FOUllTH CHRISTMAS. Chap. IX. witliin — my new cabin alone being nearly as large as cur mess-room of the * Plumper.' It was decided that wo were to take possession of the new ship on the 1st of the coming year, all of us joining her except JMoriarty, the 1st Lieu- tenant, who was to go home with the ' Plumper.' Our fourth Christmas was spent in the usual way, finishing with a dinner at the Captain's house. Chap. X. WE JOIX THE 'HECATE.' 2-2] CJIAPTER X. Tiii-a ovtr to tlio 'ITecatc' — rrLparutioiis for Siininici's Work — Triji to West Coast to look for the ' Forward ' — Visit Nootka Somitl — Survey i)f Barclay and Clayaiiuot Sounds, and Kciuiu'ks ou West Coast of the Island — Promotion — Siiip runs ashore. We began the year 18(Jl by joining our new ship, and immediately commenced such alterations as the 'Jlecate's' fittings required for the work before lier. Wo had hardly got on board, however, and had not half "shaken down,' when the non-appearance of the * Forward ' caused so much anxiety that Captain Ivichards decided upon going out to look for lier. Accordingly on the 4th we were under weigh in our new ship, and steaming out of the Strait of Fuca. The 'Forward' had at this time been absent quite a fort- night longer than she ought to liavo been, and as wq knew that heavy gales had been prevalent outside the Straits, it was natural some anxiety should be felt for her, although most of us as yet trusted in the general luck of her commander, liobson (who, poor fellow ! has since been killed), for pictking himself up somewhere. Browning, too, who had accompanied the ' Forward,' knew the coast thoroughly ; and we, there- fore, as yet attributed her absence to some accident in her machinery. Subsequently, however, we began to feel seriously alarmed for her safety. We reached Nootka Sound in the afternoon of the fol- lowing day, and, passing Friendly Cove, steamed up to the Boca del Infierno, and anchored in a small i)lace called Island Harbour. Hero we communicated with the natives, but could only hear that a steamer had been there and left some time ago. Next day ((Jth) we left Island I i '.■y* 222 SEARCH FOR THE 'FORWARD.' Chap. X. ■i 1 II ■ y» Harbour, and wont to tlio Tasis village, but uitliout learning anything more. On our way out we desi)atf]io(l a boat-party to Friendly Cove, and there found a board with a broad arrow cut upon it, but no notice. This we afterwards learned had been put up by a Mr. Lennard, who was cruising about the west coast on the look-out for furs, in his cutter, the * Templar.' Wo remained outside all night, jogging slowly down the coast towards l>arclay Sound, which wo entered next morning, and proceeded to the settlement at the liead of the Albcrni Canal. Here we remained all night, but got no further information, and next morning steamed to Uclulet at the north entrance of the 8ound, where wo found five men of the 'Florentia,' the vessel which the 'Forward' had been despatched to look for, and wliich had been wrecked 12 miles north of this point, together with several of the crew of the American brig ' Consort,' which had also been lost on the coast 90 miles beyond Xootka. From these, whom we took on board, we learned that the ' Forward' had arrived at Friendly Cove on the lOtli of December, and hearing there of the wreck of the ' Consort,' had gone to rescue her crew ; that she returned to Friendly Cove, having eighteen of the 'Consort's' crew on board, and, taking the 'Florentia' in tow, had started witli her for the Strait of Fuca. Outside Nootka Sound it appeared that they expe- rienced a considerable swell, and twice parted the chain by which the ' Florentia ' was towed, but succeeded each time in getting it on board again. About 8 in the evening, however, the 'Forward' dropped close to the 'Florentia,' and Robson (her commander) hailed to say he could not tow lier any longer, and immediately cast her off, — or the chain parted again, — they were not sure which. The ' Forward ' then ran across the ' Florentia's ' stem, steering for Nootka, and was lost sight of in ten minutes, since which they had neither seen nor heard anything of her. The 'Florentia' had afterwards drifted ashore again, and been totally lost. I ■ !', X. t'lIAP. X. IlETURN OF THE 'FORWARD.' 223 doratiou of tli facts Captain Eichards, upon a consuloration ot tncse tacts, eanio t(» tljc conclusion that if the 'Forward' had entered any of the Sounds, tlie Indians wouhl liave known of it, and that slie had probably by this time got back to Esqninialt. V>\\ therefore, returned thither, reaching it on the 10th, but to our surprise and alarm, we found nothing- had been heard of her. It was at once determined that the 'rinmjier' shouM start in search of her, this time examining the whole of the west coast, and communicating with Fort Jiupert u[)on the chance of her having gone round the island. On the 11th, thei-efore, the 'Plumper' left, and as day after day ]»assed without our obtaining any news oi' the missing gun- boat from her or any other source, we, waiting anxiously at Esquimalt, began to give up all hope. On the afternoon of the lutli, however, when sitting in my cabin, I was told that an officer was coming alongside, and on going up the ladder, great was my surprise to find l>ro\\ ning standing at the top of itl I have said he had gt)ne as pilot in the ' Forward,' and had he delayed making his appearance for a few days later, it is mjt unlikely that he would have found his kit sold as " dead and run men's effects." There he was, however, and he told us he had come in from the * Forward,' which was outside the harbour, and would arrive in an hour. He explained that they had parted company with the 'Florentia,' on account of the crown of one of the furnaces coming down, and, returning to Friendly Cove, had patched this up as well as they could, and started for Esquimalt. Outside they met strong easterly gales, which blew without intermission, and so hard that they could make no head against them. After several days' struggle, Ivobson having 20 shipwrecked men on board in addition to his own crew, began to fear that they might fall short of i)rovisions, and at last determined to bear up and go round the north end of the island, knowing that they could get sui)plies of ''X 224 • PLUMPER ' SAILS FOR ENGLAND. Chap. X. ih'tt' %- ■u some sort at lluport, which place they reached finally with no worse mishai)s on the way than running short of pro- visions and coal. On the IStli the 'Plumper' returned from her search, having learned at liupert that the gunboat had passed down the Strait, and on the 28th our old ship sailed for England amid most vociferous cheering from those she left behind. Our Avinter work in the olTice, which I have before made mention of, wont on much as usual ; while, on board, the boats were being litted up, and other preparations made for the coming summer. The 'Shark' which had before been only half-decked, was^i^ow completely decked over, and turned into a rogular schooner, capable of navigating the west coast of the island. On the 23rd of February we had official news of Sir T. ]\[aitland'8 assuming command of the station, and changed our flag for the third admiral since we came out. Uy the middle of ]\[arch everything was ready for a start, the ship caulked, chart-room fitted, our pinnace converted into a schooner, and all the boats ready, and on the 22nd we left Es(piimalt for the Fraser Iviver to lay down our seconil set of buoys at its entrance. The ' Forward ' w^ent with us to assist in this operation, and we both anchored that night olY Port lioberts. Next day we entered the Fraser and steamed up to New Westminster, without any let or hindrance. This was subject of great rejoicing to the people of A\' Captnin Stamp, wlio oxaniincd them, to bo 30 miles long and 1 to 2 miles broad. From the southern of these lakes runs the Somass Hiver, which, being joined by another river having its rise in the upi)or lake, flows into the Alberni Canal. A very great volume of water comes down by this river, so much indeed that at the end of the ebb-tide the water alongside the ship was qm'te fresh, though we lay a mile from its mouth. On both banks of the Somass, and indeed all over the valley, the soil is very rich, and the timber magnificent — the Douglas pine (Ahies Douyhml), growing to an enormous size, and the white pine, oak, and yellow cypress also abounding. Of these, however, more will be said when I come to speak of the timber of the •country generally. This tract of country has been granted upon lease to the Saw- ]\[ill Company, who have a farm upon it under cultiva- tion, and are commencing a brisk trade in spars and lumber. It was here that the flagstaff which is erected in Kew Gardens was cut. As those mills are bv far the lar^-est and most important in the colony, a short description of them may interest the reader. They have been erected in a most solid fashion, and at a heavy outlay, by English labourers, and witli English ma- chinery. They contain two gangs of saws ca])able of cutting about 18,000 feet of lumber (jtlank) daily, and in the best way, as is proved by the high price obtained for it at ]\[elbourne. Seventy white men are employed at and about the premises, so that the place has all the apijcarance of a flourishing little settlement. Two schooners and two steamers are also employed by the Company here, the former trading with Victoria and bringing the necessary supplies to the place. One of the steamers, the * Diana,' a little tug, also trades to Victoria, and is used besides for towing vessels up to and away from the mills. The second steamer, the ' Thames ' has not yet reached the colony, but is on her way ClIAP. X. ALREHNI. 229 the ig out from Enj^laud. In luUliliou to tlieso, several sliips aro employed in the spar trade between the ('oU)ny and lOurope, but the desire of tlie company is to" soil on the spot. Tlie Alberni Mills i)Ossess several advantages over simihir rival undertakin«is in Puj^jet Sound, whicli are now bi^f^innini; to be a2>preciatcd by merchants, and still more by tlie masters of ships. One of the chief of these lies in its accessibility, for Alberni being situated on the outside coast of the island, the navigator avoids all the journey in and out of the Straits of Juan do Fuca and Admiralty Inlet, which occu[)ics ordi- narily a week: so that a vessel bound to A.i.orni, making Cape Fhittery at tlio same time with one bound for I'ugit Sound, would be half-loaded by the time the other reached its destination. Again, wlien loaded, the tug takes him to the entrance of Barclay Sound, where he can wait for a fair wind, while the other, in consequence of the more prevalent winds blowing into the Strait, has to beat for two or three days to get outside. In winter this is by no means ft desirable spot to beat about in, for the squalls from the Olympian jMouutains are sudden and heavy, and fogs come on very rai)idly. Another consideration, which carries much Aveight with the ski^jper, is that there are no opportunities for men to desert at Alberni. Of course, when the trade becomes greater and the country more opened up, this advan- tage will cease to exist, but for some time to como men will be very safe there. There are no port charges whatever at Alberni, and it is a port of entry, so that vessels can clear from the mills ; whereas in Puget Sound they cannot, and have to call at Port Townshend or some other port to get their clearan(;e. The scarcity of white pine in the American territory will ju'obably enable the Alberni mills to compote with their Puget Sound rivals successfully even in the San Fran- cisco mai'ket, and tlioy are admii-ably i)laccd for the supply 230 ROAT-SUUVEYINO PAHTIES. ClIAP. X. m 'I! of America, Cliiim, and Anstruliu, witli tlio latter of wliieh countries a rcmuiierativo trade has already been opened. Several foreign Governments have entered into contracts for these spars, and our own has ordered two cargoes of top- masts to bo supplied. I will now, however, quit this subject, having to speak more particularly of tho qualities of the dillerent woods growing on this coast, when treating of the resources of tho island. On the 2t)th I started by land for Nanaimo — a description of which journey has been already given — returning on tho ]2tli of j\Iuy. I found that tho 'Ilecato' hud gone to Oiichucklesit, and proceeded thither in a canoe the same afternoon, overtaking the ship at 7 P.M. The boat-surveying parties were busily engaged by this time at tho entrance of the Sound, and the ship had moved down to Ouchucklesit on the 0th to bo nearer thoni. The boat parties had returned to the ship once during my absence. Upon their next visit on the 27th, I joined them for a week. From this time until the 9th of June wo were all hard at work about the various inlets and islands of Barclay Sound. On tho 3rd the shi}) moved down to Island Harbour in tho entrance, and on tho 9th we went out to sound off tho Straits of Fuca, leaving two boats behind to finish Uclulet. Wo spent a week running lines of soundings backwards and forwards over an area of 400 square miles, to determine the limits of the bank which runs off from the island shore for upwards of 20 miles ; and a most unpleasant week it was, and very glad we were when it was over. These soundings proved, however, of great use, as we found the edge of the bank to be so steep that a ship may always find her approxi- mate position by the soundings as she approaches the shore — the depth changing quite suddenly from 200 fathoms or there- abouts to 40 or 50. Our task being completed by the 14th, we went right up to the head of the Alberni again for sights, U Chap, X. EFFECT OF THE SIGNAL-fiUN. 231 uiid commenced paintiii*; the sliip. On ^ronday, the 2ltli, this necessary althDU^di un[»leasant jol) was linishcd. and wa started for Escjuinialt, liavin<( in tow a main t<»[tmast for the 'Bacchante,' wliich Mr. Stamp sent as a present and specimen to the Atlmiral. \Vc generally went abont thes(< channels with a good string of things of some kind towing after ns, nsnally boats which were to be dropped at dilVereiit places on our road ; and this time was no exception to the rule, for we })assed down the canal towing the topmast, with the ' Shark,' and one of the w hale-boats, which we cast oil' at the entrance, they being bound for Clayoquot to pre[iare, by sounding the entrance, for om* ariival there as soon as wo returned from Esfpiinudt. One of the whale-boats, under the charge of Mv. Browning, liad been away since wo started on our sounding ci-uiso, and we now went to pick her up off Port San Juan. Wo usually took these opportunities for exercising at giui-drill, as when wo were on surveying ground wo had other iish to fry; so that on this occasion the pi\ot-gun was ready loaded when wo opened San Juan Harbour, and saw Browning's tent com- fortably pitched on the shore. There is a certain amount of pleasure, I suppose, in disturbing an unsuspecting fellow- mortal ; and although we all knew, from frequent experience, the annoyance of seeing the ship gliding round some point, and hearing the boom of a signal-gun when it seemed rea- sonably certain that a quiet, undisturbed night might be enjoyed, it was not with much commiseration for our ship- mate that we watched, through our glasses, the figures rush- ing out as the boom of the pivot-gun reached them, and the tent's sudden disappearance. Browning, who, with the rest of us, was pretty used by this time to decisive action in packing and shifting his quarters, lost no time ; and in 20 minutes after our signal, his boat was cleared and hoisted up, and we were flying down the Strait with all sail set to a fair wind. /. m 232 DEFECllVK MAIL AT^RANGEMENTS. Chap. X. l! M On the 2()tli tlie mail steamer arrived, but with no mail — Mr. Booker, our consul at San Francisco, sending instead the i^leasaut news tliat the Americans had refused to carry tlie colonial mails Avithout payment any longer. We did not think that the Company were in the least to blame, but it was hard upon us, wlio had had nothing to do one way or the other with the postal arrangements. The American Company had been allowed to bring and take our mails for years without any offer of remuneration being made, and had the colonists alone suffered, none of us would have felt disposed to pity them. Without any reference to polities, wo could not help wishing sincerely at the time that the Derby ministry had remained iu ofilce, as it was understood tliat it was tlieir intention to grant a mail subsidy for the colony. The Company that owns the saw-mills at Alberni had made pro- posals for cairying the mails, and their agent told me that a subsiay of 20,000?. for conveying them between. 8au Francisco and the colony had been |)romised them, and that nothing but the formal confirmation of the contract was wanting when the Government went out. The agent also represented to me that the refusal of the incoming authorities to ratify the contract arose from the fact that so few letters left England adcbessed to British Columbia. The reason of this was, he said, that all men of business at homo gave instructions that their letters should be directed under cover to their agents at 8a n Francisco, on account of the uncertainty of the conveyance of the ordinary mails beyond that place. Correspondence, indeed, with the colony was at tliis time most uncertain— the majority of letters intended for settlers there beii:y; directed, "Post Office, Steilacoom, Wa^jhington territorv." This mode of direction used often to puzzle tlie post officials and amuse us. It was printed upon all the official ejivel jpes, but the cause of its origin and continuance was a mystery which no one could explain. ClIAP. X. THE BOUNDARY MARKS. 233 Steilacoom never was tlio post-office of Washington territory while we were tliere ; and even if it had been, why letters should be directed to that place, wliieh is GO miles up Admiralty Inlet, when there was a post-office at Port Towns- hend, in its entrance, Avas most unaccountable. To make the matter still worse, some peoi)le took to having "Oregon" printed or written also in a conspicuous place ontlie envelo]>e — no doubt wholly unaware of the fact that Oregon and Wasliington are t\>o distinct territories, each somewh.it larger than France. On the 2nd of July, at 9 p.m., wg again left Esquimalt, having on board five-and-twenty of the pillars which had been sent out from England to mark the dOth i)arallcl boundarv-line. We took them to Semiahmoo Vrax, and landed them on the parallel ; and, it being low-water w hen we arrived, they had to be carried about a mile across the sand. Twenty-two only were landed at the boundary, and the other three taken to Poii; lloberts, where we left them the same afternoon, and proceeded to Nanaimo. These perio- dical visits to the boundary-line gave us some idea of the rapid growth of tlie bush in this country, and showed us how completely futile the mere cutting down of trees to mark a boundary in such a country is. Wo knew the position of the boundary-line, but could not find the stump which had been driven in to mark the si)ot ; and when I tried to pene- trate along the line which could bo distinguished from above easily enough by the gap in the large- trees which, of course, had not yet grown again, I found the undergrowth so thick as to be what people unused to that country would consider quite impenetrable. L pon another occasion we w it- nessed a still more speedy obliteration of such a trail by the undergrowth of timber. When we were at Pcjrt lioberts about a year after the trail had been cut, it was necessary for some purpose to pass through it. But, although we si.. 234 SURVEY CONTINUED. ClIAP. X. I i f ,- tr hunted for an hour or more among the bush, no entrance to the trail coukl ho ibnnd. We remained at Nanaimo coasting until the 12th ; the * Grappler ' taking the rest of the beacons to Smess River, and there dei)0sitiiig them. I should have said that these beacons or pillars were constructed of cast-iron, pyramid- shaped, and having the words "American Boundary" on one side, and " Treaty, 184-1," on tlie other. They were hollow, and fitted to screw or bolt on to a stone or block of wood, the weiglit of each being about lUU lbs. On the 13th we left Nanaimo, reaching Cormorant Lay at nine that night ; and next day we went on to I'ort liupert (Beaver Harbour). We occupied our time at Bui)ert till the 17th, getting sights, &c., and cutting and dragging out of the bush five trees of the yellow cypress for repairing our boats, &c., for which and simihir purposes, as I have beftire said, this wood is the best I have ever seen. On the 17th we went on to Shucartie Bay, and spent the 18th there, while the cutter and one whaler sounded on the Xewittee Bar. We tried the seine (net) in IShucartie r»ay, but only caught about thirty salmon. On the IDth we steamed tlnougli the Goletas Channel towards th(3 north end of the island, but the fog came on so thick that we anchored on the edge of the Newittee Bar. We must have been nearer the edge indeed than we thought, for we soon found ourselves drifting ofl' it, and the ship cruising about with 50 fathoms of chain hanging from her bows. Fortunately, it cleared about this time, so we hove the anchor up and proceed(xl out. At noon we reached Capo Scott, and then went out to look at the Triangle Islands, which lie oft' it, and at dark shaped our coin-se for Woody Point, or Cape Cook, halfway between the north end of the island and Nootka Sound. AVe passed this spot next morning at daybreak, and by three in the afternoon were off" Nootka. •IsjI ^v^»,. '- - /< ;^#'- IIKAI) UK IS(ii;i> AUM, NunlKA S'lND. I'llL'.' iW le ipe ds, idy he '>g y> il Chap. X. SURVEY CONTINUED. 235 Wo were bound, however, for Clayoqnot Sound, wliieli lies between Nootka and Ba/clay Sounds ; so on we went, and reached the entrance at 8 r...i. It being then too diirk to enter, we had to do wliat seamen are proverbially i'ond of — "stand ofi' and on" for the ni<,dit. At daybreak we found ourselves off Port Cox — so named by j\roares, and described by him in terms which were calculated to lead us to suppose that, had wo wanted it, safe ancliorage miglit bo found there. When, however, the spot he had tlnis described was surveyed, it was found that a sand-bar completely blocked up its entrance. The whale-boat wo had to take up was inside, and at six she came on board ; and we went back again to the northern entrance of Clayoquot Sound, and in to an ancliorage which she had found for us, where we moored, intending to remain till we had surveyed all the Sound — little thinking what was in store for us, and what mishaj) would befal us before we should again reach Esquimalt. We all set to work surveying the various arms of the Sound, and the weather continuing fine our task progressed satisfactorily. We found sundry arms and jiassages hitherto unknown, and discovered that one previously marked upon the charts as IJrazo de Topino was inaccurately described — its extent proving to bo not more than half that laid down by former explorers. On the 7th of August I returned to the ship, after a ten- days' surveying cruise, and walking as usual into the chart- room, was told that the Indians had brought a mail across from Alberni, and that my letters were in my cabin. I was going down for them, when the Captain came on deck with a service-letter in his hand, and said, "Here is something that concerns you as First Lieutenant of the ship." I in- stantly apprehended some question of minor punishments, and was pre})aring to defend my conduct, when he read out : *' I have to inform you that Lieutenant li. C IMayne has been pronjoted to the rank of Commander," &c. This intelli- iT ' • ' 1 1 A> J 236 PROMOTION. CiiAr. X. ■M gence was so sudden and wliolly unexpected, tluit it was not until I had read the document that I fully realised it. Only the night before my return to the ship, as I lay by my watdi- fire smoking and thinking of the future, I had come to the conclusion that I should remain with the ' Hecate ' until she was paid off; and now I knew that this sudden change in my prospects would lead, upon our reaching Esipiimalt, to my being ordered to return to England. As it happened, however, my connection with the ' Hecate ' did not termi- nate so abruptly as I then expected, and I remained with her for three months from this date. On the 15th August wo started for Alberni, to get sights again, reaching it the same night. On the 17th wo agju'n left, intending to pick up Gowland, who was away on sur- veying service off Nootka Sound, and then going round the north end of the island, to finish some work at Cape Scott, and return inside the island to Xanaimo and Esquimalt. The next morning at 10 we were off Point Estevan (Xootlca Sound), and Gowland joined us. A fresh north-wester was then blowing, and during the afternoon it increased into a gale. This put a stop, of course, to sounding, and as the Captain knew that he would not be able to land on the north end of the island for some days after a gale, he determined on giving up work for the present, and going in by the Strait of Fuca. At 8 p.m. we were "• fixed " and stoerinn: for the Strait, and at 10 we ran into a thick fog. This was nothing at all unusual, and as we knew our ground, or water — indeed I may say both — by heart, we jogged along about seven knots, sounding every half-hour. About o o'clock, as ,ve approached the Strait, the speed was eased to live knof.-, and the course altered a little ; and at 4 o'clock we got a cujI of 19 fathoms. This puzzled every one. We knew the water was much deeper than this on tlie south side of the Strait, and it was agreed by all that we must have got rather far on to the north shore. The ship was accord- X. Chap. X. snip RUNS ASHORE. 23' inp:ly kopt south a milo nnd a half, and tlion np the Strait afi^ain, j^oinf^ four knots an lionr, tlio fog continuing as thick as " {xsa-soup," to use a nautical siniilo. At 8.30, wlion T relieved the ca})tain who had been all night on deck, he said " Tlireo or four hours more and you will be packing up your traps," and went down to his breakfast. IFe bad luirdly readied lii.s cabin, when he heard the orders, " Hard a port! " — " Stop her !" — "Reverse the engines! "—shouted from the bridge, and rushed on deck just in time to find the ship landed on a nest of rocks, over which the surf was sullenly breaking in that heavy, dead way wliich it docs when it has a long drift of ocean open to it but no wind to lash it into foam. I had jumped on to the bridge, and seeing her head fly round in answer to the helm, thought wo were going clear, but no such luck was in store for us, and up she went. Nothing but ro(dvS were to be seen all around us, and we were all equally puzzled to know where we were, how we got there, and how we should get the ship off. Tliot we were close to the shore we soon found, for high up over our foretopmast- head, as it appeared from aft, the summit of a cliff, with a few pine-trees upon it, showed itself. Fortunately for us, the noise of the steam escaping was hoard by the master of a small schooner, which we afterwards found was lying close to us, and we soon saw two white men, in their usual costume of red flannel and long boots, paddling to us in a small canoe. Gettine: them on board we discovered that we were two miles inside Cape Flattery, that the cliff we saw was a small ic-sland close to the main, and that about 50 vards from ns iiiv two small schooners in a little basin formed bv the rocks. "While tills information was being gathered, both paddlebox boats had been gf^ out, thi} small boats lowered, and the waist anchor placed in the paddlor and laid out astern. During the time that this was luang done, the ship swung broadside to the rocks and began to bump fearfully, — the masts spi-inging like whips, — and we began to think it was all up with the ■<•■!. .Xffl 4 !^'>Ht 238 THE 'IIFX'ATt:' ON THE ROCKS. Chap. X. poor * Ilocatc' Presently as the tido, wliicli was rising, came in and tli':>n roccdcd, slio gave two tremendous craslies, sending ns all flying about in diflerent directions. At tho second crash the chief engineer ran up from below with tho report that tho cross-sleepers had started anil the bottom of the bunker fallen in, and that another such bump would send the engines through her bottom. This was cheerful intelli- gence, and everything was got ready for a sudden departure in tho boats. Our friends in tho schooner had previously informed us that if she held together till tho tide rose a few inches, she could get in between the rocks to where his vessel lay. The stern cable had been hauled on for this purpose, but mth no effect, when suddenly she slipped a little off tho rock and then forged ahead. Instantly the stern cable was hi go, and she glided quietly in between tho rocks and along- side the schooner. No mortal could have put her there on tho calmest, smoothest day, but there she was, and right thankful for our most merciful escape were we, who a few minutes before, could see no possible chance of saving her. We let go an anchor to hold her until the sleepers of the engines could be cut away to enable them to move, and, sounding the well, found she was making water at the rate of six inches an hour. This was quite an agreeable surprise, for, from the hammering she had received, we thought the bottom must have been half-knocked out. Finding the engines would soon bo in working condition, it was deter- mined to push on for Esquimalt. It was quite neces- sary that wc should go somewhere without delay, for had a breeze sprung up we should have been as badly off where wo now were as on the rocks. Here again the master of the Yankee schooner, was of service. The passage by which we must pass out was very little more than the ship's breadth across, and lay between two sunken rocks. Ho took two of our whale-boats, anchoring them over the rocks between which our channel lay, and then, assisted by ClIAP. X. NARROW ESCAPE. 230 tin Indian, whom ho broui mifihos in tho sliip's sido ; sevornl shoots of roppor off under tlio port (pmrtcr, 10 niulortho port wheel, and another lieavy crnsh thoro; part of tho foro-fout and false keel forward j^one, with se\eral other shoots of eoppcr ofl' in various places. Inside the earpeutcr reported 11 iloors daman:e(l more or less, four hind inj?- streaks recjiiiriuf? shiftin^^ one hutt of bindiiifj- streak on jiort side leakinr^ hadly, with tho first futtoeks prohahly started. Tpon this state of affairs beinp; made known, it was decided by tho Admiral that Ave must p^o to ISau Francisco to bo docked, and that before wo started tlio diver should patch up as well as lio could, by stuftinjj^ tarred land greased oakum into the holes, nailing over that the tarred blanket or felt supplied for that purpose, and sheet lead above it. This took him six days, and most capitally ho did his work : I never saw a man work so long at a time as ho did, sometimes remaining down more than an hour without resting. I may here mention, for the information of nautical readers, that we found tarred blanket answer much better than the felt supplied by the service for such a purpose. Tho felt was too thick to suck into tho cracks ; and when it became saturated it swelled so much the diver could not work it, and being pressed together, and having no weft or thread through it, the action of tho water separated it and wore it away while lie was pre- paring the lead to cover it. Having a great deal of lead to put on, we found it mucli more convenient also to make nails for the purpose, longer than copper (2J inch) and with flat heads, one inch in diameter. Where the wood was much bruised the service nails proved too short, and the heads so small that the diver could not see to hit them, and was con- stantly dropping them and hitting his fingers. On Thursday (29th) the damages were so well stopped that we were only leaking one inch an hour ; and we took in our coal and got ready for sea. A suiTey was then ordered to be held, to report whether or not it was safe for us to go to Chap. X. R'I'AllT FOK SAN FRANCISCO. 241 Sim Fmnoisco alono. It was decided that wo oii^lit to lie attended l)y anotlur ship; for althonijh whih^ in harbour we apjwared right enough, no one could say what the 'Ileeate' could or could nut bear if she got into a galo of wind. Accordingly tlu^ Admiral ordered the ' Mutine' to acconipan} us as far as Ca[itain Iiichards thought necessary. Upon our arrival at Es»piimalt, I went on board the flag- ship for my commission, expecting at the same time to be toM to return home. To my surprise, however, I was informed that no orders to supersede me had been received; and that I must remain till my relief came. This did not disijtpoint me so much as it would have done had nothin-j^ happened to the ship, for I did not like to leave her in her present dihipi- dated condition, and 1 had deterunned to go to San Francisco in h(^r oven if I were ordered home. I will pause ere I take the reader with me on this cruise, which for me, terminated in Southampton Docks, to give a slight summary of the resources and capabilities of the countrv, and of the habits and customs of the natives. ^- . A.I r-r i R \^m IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 1^12^ ||2.5 |jo "^ Mas 1.8 I.I L25 IIIIIU il.6 <^ /A %. 7] y ^ Photographic Sdences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 242 ABORIGINES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA. Crap. XI. CHAPTER XI. Indians — Tho Coast Tribes — Classification — Manners and Customs — Notes from Mr. Duncan's Jouvn-d — Inland Tribea — Number — Information concerning them. The aboriginal inhabitants of the two colonics of British Columbia and Vancouver Island, o^ which I now propose to speak, may be divided into two classes, viz. the Coast, or, as they are generaly called, the Fish-eating Indians, and tlio Inland tribes. 13y Fish-eating Indians must be understood those who depend aloiost entirely upon fish for subsistence ; for the Inland, as well as the Coast, tribes, live to a great extent upon salmon. The Indians of tho interior are, both physically and morally, vastly superior to tho tribes of the coast. Tliis is no doubt owing in great part to their comparatively sliglit intercourse with white men, as tho northern and least known coast tribes of both tho island and mainland are much finer men than those found in the neighbourhood of the settle- ments. But it is also attributable in no slight degree to tlio difference of their lives, the athletic pursuits and sports of tho Indians of tho interior tending much more to healthy phy- sical development than the life of the Coast Indian, passed, as it is, almost entirely in his canoe, in which he sits curled up like a Turk. The upper limbs of a Coast Indian are generally so well proportioned and developed, that when sitting in his canoe ho might be thought a well-grown man, but upon his stepping out it is seen that his legs are smaller than his arms. Miserable as these limbs are in size, in shape they are still more deformed, the lower I\niA\ WOMAN AM) Cllll-D, TllK I.ATTKIJ WITH IIICAIt IIOINI) (P. I'np-p ■>^■J. !■:■«!)! ■:' :w;:i'-i;i!i ,*■}■ 'HI m f\ ii^fliLS Ml ' -'I HH ■; III ■UIji Chap. XI. THE COAST TRIBES. 243 bones becoming bent to the shape of the side of th(^ canoe, and the feet very mucli turned in. With the women this is worse than with the men, and when tliey try to walk they waddle like a parrot, crossing their feet at every step. Again, the trade in slaves, A\hich is carried on to a great •extent among all the Coast tribes, and tends undoubtedly to demoralize them, is not practised in the interior. Of course the prisoners which they make in their many fierce wars with one another are enslaved, but the practice is not made a trade of by them as by the tribes along the shore. To begin, then, with the Coast or Fish-eating Indinns. Mr. Duncan, the missionary teacher at Fort Simpson, of whose labours there I shall have occasion to speak, and upon th<' accuracy of whose information e\ery reliance may be placed, estimates the Indians of the cast side of Vancouver Island, of Queen Charlotte Sound, and of the coast of British Colum- bia, at about 40,000 in number. Among them four distinct languages are found to exist, each spoken by some 10,000 souls. One of these is shared by the Songhies, a tril>o col- lected at and around Victoria; the Cowitchen, living in the harbour and valley of Cowitchen, about 40 miles north of Victoria ; the Nanaimo and the Kwantlum Indians, gathered about the mouth of the Fraser. In the second division are comprised the tribes situated between Nanaimo and Fort Rupert, on the north of Van- couver Island, and the mainland Indians between the sami; points. These are divided into several tribes, the Nanoose, Comoux, Nimpkish, Quaw-guult, &c., on the island ; and the Squawmisht, Sechelt, Clahoose, Ucle-tah, ]Mama-lil-a-culla, &c., on the coast and among the small islands off it. Of these the Nanoose tribe inhabit the harbour and district of that name, which lies 50 miles north of Nanaimo ; the Comoux Indians being found to extend as iur as Cape Mudge. The Squawmisht, Sechelts,and Clahoose live in Howe Sound, 1!2 1 )> ' ' ,;' f', '■■■'} i^ 244 VARIETIES OF DIALECTS. Chap. XI. -n »;i Jervis Inlet, and Desolation Sound respectively. At and beyond Cape Mudge are found the Uele-talis, who hold pos- session of the country on both sides of Johnstone Strait until met 20 or 30 miles south of Fort Rupert by the Nimpkish and Maraa-lil-a-cullas. The Quaw-guults, and two smaller tribes, live at Fort Rupert itself. Five of the first-named tribes muster at Nanaimo for trade, and, being all more or less at enmity with each other, Irequent encounters between thorn take place there. The i ';iH WHITES MURDEIIKI) l)Y INDIAXS. <'JIAP. Xf. i ::|i i board tlio first tiling ho saw was liis wife, wlio had betni washed and dnrssod, and was no donbt l()okin<>' better tlian he had ever seen lier. Ahliongli of course each tliought hot other had been murdered, there was no violent manifosta- tion of joy u[)on their recognition. Captain Prevost said that her faeo lighted up, and she started a little, but then stood quite still, while the man walked up to her without any appearance of surprise or undignified haste, kissed her once on the fore- head, and turned away, taking no more notice of her whatever until he was leaving the sliij), when ho called her to his canoo. Kissing in token of aifection is not an Indian habit, and must have been taught this man, I take it, by the Roman Catholic missionaries. I have been in their villages upon several occasions while travelling -parties were leave-taking; and although tho women, while packing up the store of fish or venison for their husbands' journey have cried bitterly, and taken leave of them with every evidence of grief and afflic- tion, I have never seen them kiss each other. Several instances have occurred of whites being murdered by Indians in different parts of the colony, but I fear these murders have generally been the result of introducing fire- water, or taking liberties with the females of the tribe ; for although the Indian thinks little of selling female slaves for the vilest purposes, he sometimes avenges an insult offered to his own wives summarily. Their ideas, however, on this subject are by no means clear, for they occasionally take terrible vengeance for an insult which at another time they will not even notice. Whenever a white man takes up his residence among them, they mU. always supply him with a wife ; and if he quits the place and leaves her there, she is not the least disgi'aced in the eyes of her tribe. The result of this is, that you frequently see children quite white, and looking in every respect like English children, at an Indian village, and a very distressing sight it is. Chap. XI. DHPCltlTTION OF A rAI.AVKR. !211) North of the iilstriet occupied l>y the Uclo-tiilis como tlic Niin[»lrtion. If, however, a chief's wH'o is not d(;scended IVoni a chici, mJi > has no share in this distri- bution, nor is ,s)»-f? ever invited to tlie same feasts with her luisband. Thus dit t)»e chiefs and their people ^o on reducing themselves to poverty. In the case of (ln^ chiefs, however, this poverty lasts but a short time: they are soon replenished from the next giving away, but the pooplo only grow rich again according to their industry. One cannot bnt pity them, while one laments their folly. ** All the pleasure these poor Indians seem to have in their property is in hoarding it up for such an occasicm as I have described. They never think of appropriating what they gather to enhance their comforts, but are satistled if they can make a display like this now and then ; so that the man pos- sessing but one blanket seems to bo as well off as the one who possesses twenty ; and thus it is that there is a vast amount of dead stock accumulated in the camp doomed never to be used, but only now and then to be transferred from hand to hand for the mere vanity of the thing. " There is another way, however, in which property is dis- posed of even more foolishly. If a person be insulted, or meet with an accident, or in any way suffer an injury, real or supposed, either of mind or body, property must at once bo sacrificed to avoid disgrace. A number of blankets, shirts, or cotton, according to the rank of the person, is torn into small pieces and carried off." The numberless antics practised at these feasts would take far more space to describe than I can devote to them. I believe, however, there is some system in them, and that much which appears to us sheer folly has a meaning and a pui-pose to these poor creatures. Their sacred feasts are of several kinds, but the most common is that which takes ,',M \ ^: il'"^. •> m 111 5.'(-.3ffli;.f 266 niOriTIATORY FEASTS. Chap. XI. i 81 i, ii 'I 1 place at the commencement of each season, to invoke the aid of the deity for fine weather, plenty of fish, &c. &c. A glimpse of one of these is given by the Rev. Mr. Garrett (of whom I shall have occasion to speak hereafter in con- nection with the missions to the Indians), in a letter to his brother : — " Dec. 16. — When crossing the bridge to the Indian School to-day, I was astonished by a very loud noise proceeding from one of the houses of the Songhies. Guided by the sound, I entered the house to see what was going on. For a time, so great was the din, I could make nothing of it. At length, by force of inquiry, and pressing through the crowd to the front, I witnessed the following scene. A space, about 40 feet by 20 feet, had been carefully swept; three large bright fires were burning upon the earthen floor; round three sides of this space a bench was fixed, upon which were packed, as close as they could lit, a crowd of young women. I do not think there were any men or boys among them, but there being only the light of the fires, I could not see very distinctly. Each of these individuals was armed with two sticks. In front of them, extending all the way round the rectangular space, was a breadth of white calico. Under this calico the row of sticks exhibited themselves. Upon the ground, in the corner on my right, was a young man provided with a good-sized box, which he had fixed upon an angle and used as a drum. Also, on the ground, still nearer to me, sat an old man and an old woman ; and flat upon the ground, apparently dead, lay a female cliief, with her head reclining in the lap of the old crone ; while around me there stood a motley crowd of all tribes, staring first at me and then at the stage. All this time the choir upon the benches kept up a sort of mixture between a howl and a wail, while they beat time upon the bench with the forest of sticks with which they were armed ; our friend upon the ground making his wooden drum eloquent of noise. It is utterly vain to attempt to give any description of the Chap. XI. NOISINESS OF THE CEREMONY. 267 terrible noise which was thus occasioned. Tliis continuing for about twenty minutes, the female chief began to show signs of life ; first, by a slight motion of the hands, then of the arms, then of the shoulders, and so on, until her whole frame became violently agitated; the din and tlie uproar increasing in intensity as her agitation increased. At length she shook herself into a sitting position, when, with hair dishcAelled and glaring eyes, she formed a singularly repulsive spectacle. Her agitation increased, until there could have been no part of her body which did not shake — the storm and rattle of sticks and the howling unmeaning wail steadily keeping pace with her — when, suddenly, at a motion of her hand, there was an instantaneous siLmce. They watched her narrowly and her every motion was observed. Upon a signal tliey began again, and stopped as suddenly. At length she got upon her hunkers, and in that not very graceful position jumped about between the fires. Presently, as her inspiration increased, she raised herself and ultimately got herself erect. Having, then, by a series of very ungraceful motions, completed a journey round the fires, she came to a stand at the end of the rectangle next which the old man and woman were sitting. . . . This being done, such a clatter and rattle and yell were raised as nearly deafened me. . . . My time being now exhausted, I was obliged to leave this strange but interesting scene. . . . " It was refreshing to breathe the sea-air again and gaze upon the light of day, after emerging from so unearthly a place. Pursuing my way, I met a man carrying two large boilers. I cross-examined him, and ascertained that the female chief, who was playing her part within among the women, would presently give an abundant feast of wild-fowl to all the men, and that he was bringing down the boilers to cook the same. He further stated that all the men were assembled in his house, awaiting the gift, and that, if I wislied, he would gladly show me where they were. I accompanied Wym rm u"! i I . .1' 1 f ! Il i I-: \ 268 PROPITIATION FOR THE NEW YEAR. Chap. XI. him joyfully. I found a very large house, carefully swept, with several good fires burning brightly upon the earthen floor, and about fifty or sixty men assembled, in patient ex- pectation of the birds. I inquired into the nature of the musical entertainment going on. They told me that was their " Tamanoes," or sacred feast ; that they always played and danced so during the latter half of the last month in the year ; that they did so for two reasons — first, to make their hearts good for the coming year, and secondly, to bring plenty of rain, instead of snoiv ; that if they did not do so, a great deal of snow would come, and they should be very much afraid." At their grand feasts and ceremonies some of the chief men wear very curious masks and dresses — the former composed of the heads of animals decorated with feathers, and painted various colours. At Fort llupert, " Whale," one of the Quaw- guult chiefs, showed me his masks, which he kept carefully locked up in a large box. One in particular was most extra- ordinary: it was a wooden head, lai'ge enough to take his own insido easily, and I think meant for an eagle ; the mouth was very large, and could be opened by strings, which were carried through the top of the mask and down the back, so as to be worked by the wearer's hands. I have seen others with strings to make the wings flap, and to turn the head fi'om side to side. On all occasions of peace-making, whether it be feast or palaver, the chiefs cover their heads with eagles' doAvn and scatter it about them and over the person with whom they are making peace. I have seen this done on several occa- sions and under different circumstances. With them, as with us, white always denotes peace. For example, the Indians, whom we employed on board as interpreters, always put white feathers in their caps when going among a strange tribe. Mr. Duncan also speaks of this occurring at their reception of him on two different occasions. He says : — " Much to my sorrow, he (the chief) put on his Chap. XI. SIGNIFICANT USE OF BIRDS' DOWN. 269 dancing-mask and robes. The leading singers stopped out, and soon all were engaged in a spirited chant. They kept excellent time by clapping their hands and beating a drum. (I found out afterwards that they had been singing my praises, and asking me to pity them and do them good.) The chief Kahdoouahah danced with all his might during the singing. He wore a cap which had a mask in front, set with mother-of- pearl and trimmed with porcupine-quills. The quills enabled him to hold a quantity of white birds' down on the top of his head, which he ejected while dancing by jerking his head forward ; thus he soon appeared as if in a shower of snow. In the middle of the dance a man approached me with a handful of down and blew it over my head, thus symbolically uniting me in friendship with all the chiefs present and the tribes they severally represented." On another occasion he says : — " The usual course was pur- sued. Kinsahdad dressed himself up in his robes, and then danced while the people sang and clapped their hands. Dm-ing the performance I was nearly covered with white downy feathers. A man, after having feathered Kinsahdud's head, came and blew a handfid over me. One great feature of the dance was that the performer should keep a cloud of feathers flying about his guest. It was done in this way : the dancer, after making a graceful aj)proach, would commence a retreat, still keeping his face toward me, and, in perfect time with the song and clapping of hands, jerk his head forward at every step, and thus keej) a quantity of feathers flying from his head-dress." The reader will notice in these extracts, and in all that has been said aoout the Indian feasts, a curious distinction between the customs of the West and those of the East. Here it is always the men, and the chief men, who dance and take a part in all the antics, while in the East the women are the performers. I have never seen an Indian woman dance at a feast, and believe it is seldom if ever done. The young 1^1 270 MANNER OF CONDUCTING WAR. Chap. XI. II •! men sit round and look on witli awe at what Easterns would regard as beneath tlie dignity of man. So with work : the woman of the West is a slave, performing the most menial offices, while the woman of the East lives a life of luxurious idleness. On missions of peace also this down is, as I have said, made use of. One day in talking to Mr. Bamfield, the Indian agent on the West coast of Vancouver Island, who has resided among the Ohyat tribe several years, wo Avere comparing many of the Indian customs with those of Europe, and he told me that on the occasion of a quarrel between the Ohyat and another tribe, a chief, who was one of the best speakers among them, was employed for several days as envoy, going frequently to the enemy's camp to negociate, and that his diplomacy averted war. During the whole time of the negociations the peace-maker wore eagles' down all over his head, so that he looked as if he had been powdered, and eagles' feathers in his cap, or secured to a band round his head. I remember Mr. Bamfield mentioning another occa- sion, on which they came to blows, as illustrative of the sys- tematicmethod of their approach and attack. The Ohyats and Nootkas joined forces against the Clayoquots ; and j\Ir. Bamfield accompanied them part of the way. When they approached the Clayoquot village they were to attack, they put into a sandy beach and landed : the chiefs then held a consultation with those who knew the place best, and having hit upon a young man who had a Clayoquot wife, told him to draw a plan of the place on the sand. He commenced by marking out the ground, then the houses ; describing the par- titions in them, how many men were in each, whether they were brave or cowardly : in fact, describing the place accu- rately. They then divided the work between the two tribes, and, standing back to back some little way apart, the chiefs told off each man to his duty. Everytliing, he said, was per- fectly arranged. The attack was, however, not successful, as Chap. XI. rns would ^ork: the st menial luxurious lid, made ian agent I resided •mparing and he e Ohyat speakers envoy, md that ! of the over his ed, and iind his jr ocea- the sys- Ohyats nd Mr. n they k, they held a having him to !ed by le par- r they accu- tribes, chiefs s per- fiil, as XA\l vm II •I ' 1 1 i i !| ! Hi INIHAN l'.riiIAl,-(il!(UMl I'um.' i.';i Chap. XI. MODES OF SEPULTURE. 271 the Nootkas failed in their part and would not leave their canoes. The Ohyats took 18 heads, and lost about the same number. The cause of the war was that the Clayoquots had murdered a white man, and tried to put the blame on the others, among whom he was living. As a rule, the Indians burn their dead, and then bury the ashes. The mode of depositing these remains differs even among members of the same tribes. Sometimes they are buried in the ground, sometimes in trees, in boxes or in canoes. There is, I think, no rule or rules observed in sepulture. I have seen more suspended among the branches of the trees than buried in the gi-ound, but their mode of sepulture depends very much upon convenience and circumstances. More are laid on the ground than in it, for the Indians have, I believe, a decided objection to interment — whether from any idea of a resurrection or not, I cannot say. When buried on the ground, they are generally placed among the bushes on some small islet, and the top of the box is always covered with large stones. We used quite commonly to come across the bleached bones when putting up surveying-stations. It is very common for a man's pro- perty to be buried with him, or suspended over his grave. In the case of great men the latter course is, I think, chosen generally for the purpose of showing their wealth. I have seen the grave of a chief inland with a number of blankets cut in strips hanging over it, several pairs of trowsers, and two or three muskets. At Kanaimo there is a small hut built over the remains of the late chief. In the case of a chief it is also customary to paint or carve his crest on the box in which his bones lie, or to affix it on a large sign- board upon a pole or neighbouring tree. Mr. Duncan says that if the crest of the deceased happens to be an eagle or a raven, it is usual among the Northern Indians to carve it in the act of flying — the bird being affixed to the edge of the box with its wings spread, so that it appears to a passer-by mm l^^ Ui'^ i I I! »! IP' li li >■! 272 PRACTICE OF INCREMATION. Chap. XL as if just about to leave the coffin ; and ho (IMr. Duncan) very naturally asks whether this may come of any knowledge of a resurrection of the dead among the Indians. They will not usually let strangers witness the burial of their dead. It was at one time not uncommon for Indians to desert for ever a lodge in which one of their family had died ; but this rarely, if ever, happens now. The rites of mourning are carried out strictly, but not until the corpse is buried. After this, at sunrise and sunset, they wail and sing dirges for the space of some thirty days. I never witnessed a funeral myself ; but I think that, ex- cept when the person to be buried is of some rank, there is very little ceremony. At Fort Simpson it appears to be the regular custom to burn the dead, but this is departed from in some cases ; for Mr. Duncan mentions witnessing a funeral there from the Fort Gallery. He says : " The deceased was a chief's daughter, who had died suddenly. Contrary to the custom of the Indians here (who always burn their dead), the chief begged permission to inter her remains in the Fort Garden, along- side her mother, who was buried a short time ago, and was the first Indian thus privileged. The corpse was placed in a rude box, and borne on the shoulders of four men. About twenty Indians, principally women, accompanied the old chief (whose heart seemed ready to burst) to the gi'ave. A bitter wailing was kept up for three-quarters of an hour, during which time about seven or eight men, after a good deal of clamour (which strangely contrasted with the appa- rent grief of the mourners), fixed up a pole at the head of the grave, on which was suspended an Indian garment. At the head of the mother's grave several driuking-vessels were attached, as well as a garment. It is certain that the Indians have some idea of a Superior Being ; and this idea, no doubt, dates before the appearance of any priests among them. They believe, too, that thunder is ' \ Chap. XI. TRADITION OF THE FLOOD. 273 liis voice. I remember on one occasion, when I was tra- velling in a canoe during a violent tlumcler.stonn, that, at each peal, all the rowers rested on their paddles, and said a prayer, taught them, no doubt, by tlie Romish priests, and I could not get them to paddle on till they had finished it. After a storm on the coast, they always search for dead whales, and seem to connect them in some way with tlmndf". It is very difficult indeed to get at any of their traditions, and still more difficult to distinguish between their own standard doctrines and the teaching of the priests. One of the settlers on the west coast of Vancouver Island, who has been there for a number of years, told me that there was at Ohyat a carving of two eagles with a dove in their centre and two serpents in the rear, with a whale seemingly seeking protection from the serpents. This carving representing thunder, under its native name Tuturrh, was held in great respect by them. An old hall-breed once told me that one of their legends was that crows were wliite once, but were made black by a curse: what tliey had done to deserve tliis punishment I could not ascertain. The Indians appear generally to have some tradition about the Flood. Mr. Duncan mentions that the Tsimsheans say that all people perished in the water but a few. Amongst that few there were no Tsimsheans ; and now they are at a loss to tell how they have reappeared as a race. In preaching at Obser- vatory Inlet he referred to the Flood, and this led the chief to tell him the following story. He said : " We have a tradi- tion about the swelling of the water a long time ago. As \ ou are going up the river you will see the higli mountain to the top of which a few of our forefathers escaped wlien the waters rose, and thus were saved. But many more were saved in their canoes, and were drifted about and scattered in every direction. The waters went down again ; the canoes rested on the land, and the people settled themselves in the various spots wliither they had been driven. Thus it is the Indians T TO isM; pryr. 'm <^, i\ U I '4 j;; ill ii i;l ' 274 IJKLIEF IN THE SON OF GOD. Chap. XI. are found F?pread all over the country ; but tlioy all under- stand the same songs and have the same customs, which shows that they are one people." Schoolcraft, the American writer, in his 'History of the Indians,' narrates a similar tradition, which is found current on the east side of the Ilocky Mountains. As their languages become more known, many other legends and traditions will doubtless come to light ; but I must not conclude this notice of them without reference to the most interesting yet known, viz., a belief in the Son of God. " This [Observatory Inlet] being " (says Mr. Duncan) " a noted place, the Indians have several legends connected with the various objects about. I listened to some, and re- marked that in most of them the So?i of the Chief above occu- pies the place of benefactor or hero, and most of the acts ascribed to him are acts of mercy. It was he, thoy ^ay. that first brought the small fish to this inlet for them, which now forms one of their principal articles of food." As I have before said, the Itoman Catholic priests have, so far as regards forms and the observance of certain religious customs, done a good deal among t'i?m. I remember one Sunday in Port Harvey, Johnstone Strait, when we were all standing on deck, on a bright sunny morning just before church-time, looking at six or eight large canoes which hung about the ship, they suddenly struck up a chant, which they continued for about ten minutes, singing in beautiful time, their voices sounding over the perfectly still water and dying away among the trees with a sweet cadence that I shall never forget. I have no idea what the words were, but they told us they had been taught them by the priests. The Roman Catholic priest, indeed, has little cause to complain of his reception by the Indians. On the west coast, at a place where the priest had been before, but had not time to revisit them, he sent his shovel-hat in the canoe in his stead ; and upon its arrival the whole village turned out, shouting AP. XI. Chap. XT. FONDNESS FOT^ fiAMBLIN<}. 275 uiider- which of the current otlier i but I ence to Son of )uncau) nnectod and re- ve occu- :he acts lay. that ich now have, so •eligious 3er one ^e were before which , which autiful water that I ere, but s. The omplain st, at a time to stead ; houting )e s •* Lo Protre I Lo Pretre ! " and had prayers at once upon the spot. I liavo seen otlior lufh'ans, on tlie priest's arrival among tliem, cease their fishing and other occupations, and hurry to meet him. At Esquimau all the Indians attend the Itomish mission on Sunday morning, and at eight o'clock the wliole village may be seen paddling across the harbour to the mission- house, singing at the top of their voices. Certainly the self-denying zeal and energy with which the priests labour among them merit all the success they meet with. To come upon them, as I have done, going from village to village alone among the natives, in a dirty little canoe, drenched to the skin, forces comparisons between them and the generality of the labourers of other creeds that are by no means flat- tering to the latter. Perhaps the worst failing of the Red man, next to his love of fire-water, is his passion for gambling. Most of them will gamble away everything they have— houses, wives, property, all are staked upon the chances of their favourite games. If in passing their village at night you leave them sitting in a ring gambling, the chances are that, upon your return in the morning, you will find them at it still. I have only seen two games played by them, in both of which the object was to guess the spot where a small counter happened to be. In one of these games the counter was held in the player's hands, which he kept swinging backwards and forwards. Every now and then he would stop, and some one would guess in which hand he held the counter, winning of course if he guessed right. The calm intensity and apparent freedom from excitement, with which they watch the progress of this game is perfect, and you only know the intense anxiety they really feel by watching their faces and the twitching of their limbs. The other game con- sisted of two blankets spread out upon the ground, and covered with saw-dust about an inch thick. In this was t2 i ^m •r' 27C PH ACTIO K OF POLYGAMY. ClIAP. XI. I ! H I!i placed the counter, a piece of bono or iron about tlio size of lialf-a-crown, and one of the players shiiftlcd it about, tho others in turn guessing where it was. These games aro usually played by ton or .,wolve men, who sit in a circle, with the property to be staked, if, as is usual, it consists of blankets or clothes, near them. Chanting is very commonly kept up during tho game, probably to allay the excitement. I never saw women gamble. The Indians are well known to be polygamists, but I believe that a plurality of wives is general only among tho chiefs of tribes, the rest being commonly too poor to afford this luxury. No other cause for any such abstinence on their part exists. When Mr. Stain was tho Colonial Chaplain at Victoria, the chief of the tribe residing there went to him for some medicine for his wife, who was ill. He gave hini something which cured her, and, to the astonishment of the chaplain and his family, a day or two afterwards the chief came to his house, leading his wife by the hand, and, in gratitude for her recovery, presented her to his benefactor. On being remonstrated with, I believe, by the chaplain's wife, who objected, not at all unnaturally, to the nature of the oifering, he said it was nothing, not worth mentioning in fact, as he could easily spare her, she being one of eleven ! I have said that intrigiie with the wives of men of other tribes is one of the commonest causes of quarrel among the Indians. This is not surprising, when it is con- sidered, among other things, that marriage is entirely a buying and selling process, and the bargain is frequently made when the principals are children. The man or his friends give so many blankets for the wife, while yet a child. If when she grows up she refuses to marry the man who has purchased her, she or her friends must return all the pro- perty paid for her; if they cannot do this, she is obliged to go to the buyer. There is generally a feast at the wedding of any one of importance in a tribe ; but this, I think, Chap. XI. 10 sizo of l)oiit, the xines aro rclo, witli blankets r kept ni> I never ts, but I nong the to aflford 5 on their [iplain at t to liim rave him 'nt of the liief came gratitude 3n being eife, wlio offering, ,ct, as he men of quarrel is con- atirely a equently tt or his a child, who has the pro- obliged ; at the , I think, INPIAN tilHL, SHOWINO CONICAL FOUSI OF SKT I.l„ I'liyp a: I Chap. XI. FACIAL CHARAGTEE1!-TICS. 277 depends entirely on the wealth of bride and bridegroom, much as in our own country. In appearance the Indians of Vancouver Island have the common facial characteristics of low foreheads, high cheek- bones, aquiline noses, and large mouths. They all have their heads flattened more or less ; some tribes, however, cul- tivating this peculiarity more than others. The process of flattening the head is eftected while they are infants, and is very disgusting. I once made a woman uncover a baby's head, and its squashed elongated a})pearance nearly made me sick. By far the most flattened heads belong to the tribe of Quatsino Indians, living at the north-west end of the island. Those who have only seen the tribes of the east side of the island may be inclined to think the sketch of this girl exaggerated, but it was really drawn by measurement, and she was found to have 18 inches of solid flesh from her eyes to the top of her head. It does not appear that the process at all interferes with their intellectual capacities. Among some of the tribes pretty women may be seen : nearly all have good eyes and hair, but the state of filth in which they live generally neutralises any natural charms they may possess. Half-breeds, as a rule, inherit, I am afraid, the vices of both races : I speak of the uneducated half-breed, to whose Indian abandonment to vice and utter want of self-control appears to be added that boldness and daring in evil which he inherits from his white parent. The Indian's head is generally large, often so large as to be somewhat out of proportion to the rest of his frame. Men and women both part their hair in the middle, and wear it long, hanging over the shoulder. The hair is generally good, but so neglected that it looks, and is, very dirty. The custom of painting prevails among all Indians in North America. They paint the face in hideous designs of black and red (the only colours used), and the parting of the hair is also coloured red. I have seen them when travelling, and when I i*; 1 •< ',' 1 H ( r^l '! 1 ■ ■ ', ; 1 flip ill :i i; ( »' N ' J jj i II n '.* ' 1 il 1 1^ i ^ II !<; t !'' i!! 278 MODE OF WEARING THE HAIR. Chap. XI. knew they had not washed for three weeks, take the greatest pains in cokjuring their faces, oiling their hair with fish-oil, and painting the pailing. The northern males sometimes wear their hair cut short, or rolled up into a sort of ball on the top of the head ; but the southern tribes consider it a disgrace to have short hair. A Barclay Sound lad, whom we took on board the 'Hecate,' and who had been per- suaded to have his hair cut, said he could not go back to his tribe until it had grown again. The men very seldom have beards or moustaches, and are in the habit of pulling out any hair that appears on their faces. This beardlessness appertains to almost all the North American Indians, and I believe not to them only, as the natives of the Congo, who are very fine men, have no hair on their faces. The hair of their heads is almost always dark brown, though sometimes an Albino is seen with quite white hair. The strong feature in all their faces is their eyes, which are nearly always fine, and among the half-breeds very beautiful. Their constant diet f dry fish, &c., has the curious effect of destroying the teeth, so that you hardly ever see an Indian over middle age with any visible, having worn them down level with the gums. Some Indians, especially the tribes of Queen Charlotte Islands, carve very well, and much of their leisure time is spent in decorating their canoes and paddles, making dishes and spoons in wood or slate, bracelets and rmgs of metal. They make busts out of whales' teeth, that are in some cases very faithful likenesses. Like the Chinese, they imitate literally anything that is given them to do ; so that if you give them a cracked gun-stock to copy, and do not warn them, they will in their manufacture repeat the blemish. Many of their slate-carvings are very good indeed, and their designs most curious. One of their strangest prejuiiives, which apj)ears to pervade Chap. XI. ANTIPATHY TOWARDS THE AMERICANS. 279 all tribes alike, is a dislike to telling their names — thus you never get a man's right name from himself; but they will tell each other's names without hesitation. I have previously mentioned that slavery is universally practised among these tribes, and the subsequent extracts from ]\Ir. Duncan's Journal will show with what horrid cruelty their captives are treated — indeed, it often happens that some crime is atoned for by a present of three or four slaves, who are butchered in cold blood. I have also spoken of the intense hatred of them all for the " Boston men." * This hatred, although caused chiefly by the cruelty with which they are treated by them, is also owing in a great measure to the system adopted by the Americans, of moving them away from their own villages when their sites become settled by whites. The Indians often express dread lest we should adopt the same course, and have lately petitioned Governor Douglas on the subject. Their phraseology abounds in highly figurative and flowery expressions. It is so little known, however, as yet, that anything like an accurate account is impossible. In illustra- tion, I will, however, quote from ]Mr. Duncan's Journal an account given him by an Indian, of the first appearance of white men among his people, the Keethratlah Indians, near Fort Simpson. " One very old man," he writes, " with characteristic animation, related to me the tradition of the first appearance of the whites near this place. It was as follows: — 'A large canoe of Indians wore busy catching halibut in one of these channels. A thick mist enveloped them. Suddenly they heard a noise as if a large animal were striking through the water. Immediately they concluded that a monster from the deep was in pursuit of them. With all speed they hauled up their fisliing-lines, seized the paddles, and strained every nei-ve to reach the shore. Still the * Americans. ^1 .:- .li, I > ';,.> I'vado 280 FIRST ADVENT OF WHITES. Chap. XI. iW plunging noiso came nearer. Every minute they expected to be ingulplied Avithin the jaws of some huge creature. However, they reached the land, jumped on shore, and turned round in breathless anxiety to watch the approach of the monster. Soon a boat filled with strange-looking men emerged from the mist. The pulling of the oars had caused the strange noise. Though somewhat relieved of fear, the Indians stood spell-bound with amazement. " ' The strangers landed, and beckoned the Indians to come to them and bring them some fish. One of them had over his shoulder what was supposed only to be a stick : presently he pointed it to a bird that was flying past — a violent poo went forth — down came the bird to the ground. The Indians died! — as they revived, they questioned each other as to their state whether any were dead, and what each had felt. " ' The whites then made signs for a fire to be lighted ; the Indians proceeded at once, according to their usual tedious practice, of rubbing two sticks together. The strangers laughed, and one of them, snatching up a handful of dry grass, struck a spark into a little powder placed under it. Instantly another poo ! — and a blaze. The Indians died ! After this the newcomers wanted some fish boiled : the Indians, therefore, put the fish and water into one of their square wooden buckets, and set some stones on the fire ; intending, when they were hot, to cast them into the vessel, and thus boil the food. The whites were not satisfied with this way : one of them fetched a tin kettle out of the boat, put the fish and some water into it — and then, strange to say, set it on the fire. The Indians looked on Avith astonishment. However, the kettle did not consume ; the water did not run into the fire. Then, again, the Indians died ! " ' When the fish was eaten, the strangers put a kettle of rice on the fire ; the Indians looked at each other, and whispered Ahhahih, ahhahn ! or, " IMaggots, maggots ! " The rice being r! : —.-.JL CUAP. XI. FACE ORNAMENTS. 281 cooked, some molasses was produced and mixed with it. The Indians stared and said, Coutree um tsakah ahket, or " The ^ease of dead people." " * The whites then tendered the rice and molasses to the Indians ; but they only shrank away in disgust. Heeing this, to prove their integrity, they sat down and enjoyed it them- selves. The sight stunned the Indians, and again they all died. Some other similar wonders were worked, and the profound stupor which the Indians felt each time to come over them, they termed death. " * The Indians' turn had now come to make the white strangers die ; they dressed their heads, and painted their faces. A Noh-noTc or wonder-working spirit possessed them : they came slowly and solemnly, seated themselves before the whites, then suddenly lifted up their heads and stared ; their reddened eyes had the desired effect — the whites died ! ' " The " heart " is the word always used by them in speaking of motive, disposition, or feelings. If a person is angry, tbey say — " His heart is bad to them." If they wish to express their kind feelings or intentions, they say — " Their heart is veiy good towards you." And if the fish leave a place where they are usually caught, or it is a bad season, they say the fishes' hearts are bad. All the Indians, both men and women, wear ornaments in the ears, nose, and lips. These are made of shell or bone ; the commonest earrings worn by almost all, are bits of a blue shell like the inside of an oyster, and called in trade " kopose." Ilings of the same material passed through the cartilage of the nose are very common : the northern tribes vvear also very generally a small round shell, called the "hai-qua," in appearance not unlike a piece of clay- pipe stem one or two inches long, stuck into their lower lil)s at an angle of 45° with the chin. Some also wear a piece of bone inside the lower li]», making it project in a horridly ugly way. Prej)aration for this, of course, has to be '\\'!^ -./ 1^ i w i ! fc'! i h^ i\, ']\ iiii'i ; ^■:! 282 HIDEOUS LIP DEFORMITY. Chap. XI. commenced while the " patient " is yoimg : they fii-st bore a liole in tlie hollow of the under lip, in which is put a piece of silver the shape of a pen. After some time this is taken out and an oval-shaped piece of wood inserted horizontally ; after a time this becomes too small, and a larger piece is inserted, till, as a woman gets towards old age, she will have a piece of wood three inches long and two inches wide in the lip. Fortunately this custom is only practised among the northern tribes, for it makes a woman the most hideous creature imaginable. The lip-piece is concave on both sides, while the edge is grooved so as to keep it in its place ; this sometimes answers tlie purpose of a spoon, and j\Ir. Duncan says he has seen an old woman put her food on it for a few seconds while it cooled, and then raising her lip, empty this semi-natural platter into her mouth. Tliis lip, he says, is considered a mark of honour among these poor creatures : a woman's rank among women — that is, as far as her word, opinion, or advice is concerned — is settled according to the size of her wooden lip ; so that if a young woman dares to quarrel with an old one, the latter will not remind her of her youth, inexperience, and consequent unfitness to dictate to age, but will reproach iier with the inferior size of her lip. Red is the colour most commonly used in painting the face ; but sometimes black is applied. I have seen three or four canoes full of Haida Indians (from Qusen Charlotte Island), each canoe holding 16 or 18 people, all black as my hat. The face is sometimes tatooed, but not so commonly as on the eastern side of the continent. For dress many now wear shirts and trowsers, purchased at the stations of the Hudson Bay Company ; but the normal style is still a blanket brought round the body, and pinned with a wooden skewer on the shoulder, or held by the hand. On my first visit to this place, this was rather a picturesque costume, as they mostly wore native blankets made of dogs' hair, and stained various colours ; but now they use English •p^.*. [yti. Chap. XI. CLOTHING AND CANOES. 283 hand. English blankets, and as tliey are always very dirty, the near effect is not pleasant, though they still look i)icturosqiio at a distance. Very small feet and well-made hands are common among them ; as a rule, they all go hare-tooted and bare-headed, though, as I have before mentioned, when travelling they wear mocassins. These are of no use, however, for keeping out wet ; for, being made of plain deer-skin, they soon get quite soft and sloppy. No doubt many of the diseases so common among them are attributable to constant wet feet. Sometimes tlicy wear caps or tie handkerchiefs round their heads, and in wet weather tlicy frequently wear mushroom- shaped hats made of the bark of the thuja, cut in narrow strips, plaited much like Panama straw, and painted with various devices. Their canoes are of all sizes, from frail things a man can hardly find room to sit in, to boats large enough to hold 30 or 40 people with their equipment. Tliey are all made of single trees, altliough sometimes the very large ones have a bow and stern tacked on. After they cut the tree down they burn out the inside, and then finish it off and shape it Avith axe and knife. The models of some are beautiful, their shape and fashion varying according to the place they are required for. Thus all the Indians inside the island and -lorthward of it have round and pointed sterns, while in the Strait of Fuca and on west coast of the island they have straight-up and down sterns, each being adapted to the waters in which they are used. The birch-bark canoes, made from the bark of Betula papyracea, and so celebrated in the interior and east of the Rocky Mountains are unknown, or at least unused, on the coast. I must not omit to mention that most of the Indians are good shots at a fixed object; but they never think of firing at a bird on the wing. Nothing excites their admiration more than to see birds shot flying ; but I could never get them to try it. No doubt a great reason for this is their scanty supply of powder and shot; they are i '* ill ii ! s|( (1 'I ! t M H i I <^.A. ■f;;if 11! 281 MODES OF SHOOTING BIIIDS, &c. Chap. XI. always bogging for tlieso, and will barter almost anything for them. Their mode of approaching wild-fowl is very curious and characteristic : a man will take a small canoe and fill the bows with branches of evergreens, so as completely to conceal himself seated behind it. Through the middle of this hedge he points his gun, lotting the barrel rest along the stem of the canoe. He then paddles the canoe very quietly along in the direction of a number of birds sitting on the water, taking care to keep the bows straight towards them : the birds are very sharp, and will swim across the canoe to ascertain if there is any deception ; but as they all go one way, the man is able to keep the canoe facing them, and they fancy it is a floating bush. 8o careful are these men of their powder, however, that they are not generally content to get within shot of one bird, but will manoeuvre about till they can get two or three in a line. I have seen them devote half a day to tV '.s, perhaps only firing once in several hours. For vermin they set traps with large stones, very like our brick traps, except that they are open at both ends ; this is put in some place where the animal is in the habit of passing, and falls on him as he runs under it. To shoot deer, they usually ascertain the spot on some stream where the animals go to drink ; they then select tlie first hollow tree within shot of the trail, and build up the entrance to it with bushes so as to shelter themselves from view. Towards evening or before dawn, they ensconce them- selves in this tree, from whence they get a deliberate shot at the unsuspecting animal as he passes. The value of the following extracts from Mr. Duncan's letters to the Church Missionary Society respecting these Coast Indians is so great that, lengthy as they are, I will make no excuse for giving them to the reader. "Sometimes slaves have to be sacrificed to satiate the vanity of their owners, or take away reproach. Only the Chap. XI. SACRIFICE OF SLAAT.S. 285 other day we were called upon to witness a terriblo scene of this kind. An old chief, in cool blood, ordered a slave to bo dragged to the beach, murdered, and thrown into the water. His orders were quickly obeyed. The victim was a poor woman. Two or three reasons are assigned for this foul act : one is, that it is to take away the disgrace attached to his daughter, who has been suffering some time from a ball wound in the arm. Another report is, that he does not expect his daughter to recover, so he has killed his slave in order that she may prepare for the coming of his daughter into the unseen world. I think the former reason is the most probable. " I did not see the murder, but, immediately after, I saw crowds of people running out of those houses near to where the corpse was thrown, and forming themselves into groups at a good distance away. This I learnt was from fear of what was to follow. Presently two bands of furious wretches appeared, each headed by a man in a state of nudity. They gave vent to the most unearthly sounds, and the two naked men made tliemselves look as unearthly as possible, proceed- ing in a creeping kind of stoop, and stepping like two proud horses, at the same time shooting forward each arm alter- nately, which they held out at full length for a little time in the most defiant manner. Besides this, the continual jerking their heads back, causing their long black hair to twist about, added much to their savage appearance. " For some time they pretended to be seeking the body, and the instant they came where it lay they commenced screaming and rushing round it like so many angry wolves. Finally they seized it, dragged it out of the water, and laid it on the beach, where I was told the naked men would com- mence tearing it to pieces with their teeth. The two bands of men immediately surrounded them, and so hid their horrid work. In a few minutes the crowd broke again into two, when each of the naked cannibals appeared with half of the ■ ' ' 1':. ■i* ( ! I'U ■i ! \V. \'l *"!» li" li Ii 1 1 1 ii , ';3 I: : 1 , 1 a i 280 INITIATION OF MEDICINE-MEN. Chap. XI. body in his hands. Separatinpj a few yards, they commenced, amid horrid yells, their still more horrid feast. The sij^ht was too terrible to behold. I left the gallery with a depressed heart. I may mention that the two bands of savages jnst alluded to belong to that class which the whites term * medi- cine men.' The superstiti(ms connected with this fearfnl system are deejily rooted here ; and it is the admitting and initiating of fresh pnpils into these arts that employ mimbers, and excite and interest all, during the winter months. This year I think there must have been eight or ten parties of them, but each party seldom has more than one pupil at once. In relating their proceedings I can give but a faint concep- tion of the system as a whole, but still a little will serve to show the dense darkness that rests on this place. " I may mention that each party has some characteristics peculiar to itself ; but, in a more general sense, their divisions are but three — viz., those who eat human bodies, the dog- eaters, and those who have no custom of the kind. "Early in the morning the pupils would be out on the beach, or on the rocks, in a state of nudity. Each had a place in front of his own tribe ; nor did intense cold interfere in the slightest degree. After the poor creature had crept about, jerking his head and screaming for some time, a party of men would rush out, and, after surrounding him, would commence singing. The dog-eating party occasionally carried a dead dog to their pupil, who forthwith commenced to tear it in the most doglike manner. The party of attendants kept up a low growling noise, or a whoop, which was seconded by a screeching noise made from an instrument which they believe to be the abode of a spirit. In a little time the naked youth would start up again, and proceed a few more yards in a crouching posture, with his arms pushed out behind him, and tossing his flowing black hair. All the while he is earnestly watched by the group about him, and when he pleases to sit down they again surround him and commence Chap. XI. INITIATION OF MEDICINE-MEN. 287 singing. Tliis kind of thing goos on, >vitli sovoral little additions, for some time, liofore the prodigy finally retires, he takes a run into every house belonging to Ids tribe, and is followed by his train. When this is done, in some rases ho has a ramble on the tops of the same houses, during whieh he is anxiously watched by his attendants, as if they expected his flight. By-and-by he condescends to come down, and they then follow hira to his den, which is signified by a rope made of red bark being hung over the doorway, so as to prevent any person from ignorantly violating its precincts. None are allowed to enter that house but those connected with the art : all I know, therefore, of their further pro- ceedings is, that they keep up a furious hammering, singing, and screeching for hours during the day. " Of all these parties, none are so much dreaded as the cannibals. One morning I was called to witness a stir in the camp which had been caused by this set. When I reafdied the gallery I saw hundreds of Tsirasheeans sitting in their canoes, which they had just pushed away from the beach. I was told that the cannibal party were in search of a body to devour, and if they failed to find a dead one, it was pro- bable they would seize the first living one that came in their way; so that all the people living near to the cannibals' house had taken to their canoes to escape being torn to pieces. It is the custom among these Indians to burn their dead; but I suppose for these occasions they take care to deposit a corpse somewhere, in order to satisfy these inhuman wretches. "These, then, are some of the things and scenes which occur in the day during the winter months, while the nights are taken up with amusements — singing and dancing. Occa- sionally the medicine parties invite people to their several houses, and exhibit tricks before them of various kinds. Some of the actors appear as bears, while others wear masks, the parts of which are moved by strings. The great feature in their proceedings is to pretend to murder, and then to restore M ri^^ 288 CURIOUS MOON-PEllFORMANCE. CiiAP. xr. I i. i-ft m to lifo, and so forth. Tho cftnnibiil, on sncli oconsioiis, is goiionilly su|)}>li('d with two, throo, or four huiniiii bodies, wliich he tears to pieces before his audience. Several [)ersons, eitlier from bravado or as a charm, present their arms for him to bite. I have seen several wliom he has thus bitten, and 1 hear two have died from the effects. " One very dark niglit I was tokl that there was a moon to see on the beach. On going to see, tliere was an ilhiniinated disc, with the figure of a man upon it. The water was then very low, and one of the conjuring parties had lit up tin's disc at the water's edge, Tliey had made it of wax, with gi-eat exactness, and presently it was at the full. It was an imposing sight. Nothing could bo seen around it ; but the Indians suppose that the medicine party are then liolding converse with the man in the moon. Indeed there is no wonder in the poor creatures being deluded, for the peculiar noises that were made, while all around was perfectly still, and the good imitation of the moon while all around was enveloped in darkness, seemed just calculated to create wild and superstitious notions. After a short time the moon waned away, and the conjuring party returned whooping to their house. " Before any young persons can join these medicine parties they are supposed to go into tlie bush for some days, and be there alone, whence they receive their supernatural gifts. But I am inclined to believe that this is not strictly carried out, for it is also supposed that they are not visible when they come back: it therefore becomes an easy matter to conceal them in their houses for a short time, and then publish a lie. The end of all these proceedings is the giving away property ; so the chiefs reap the benefit. No person need think of becoming " Allied " until he or his friends have amassed considerable property, and are disposed to beggar themselves. " One Sunday I was startled by a peculiar noise proceeding i% ClIAl'. XI. mi:dioink-mi:n not noc^rons. 280 giving person Is have beggar IVuni the cuiup, uml on g< what was tlio <'aiist>, I ol)!sorvo(l a man, wlio, it sccins, had linishecl liis ('(liication as an "Allied," and was n(»w going to give away his goods. Ho was proceeding to a distant part of tiio camp, and step- ping all the way lilco a itroud nnnianageahle horse. Uehind him were abont lil'teen or twenty men, all holding on to a kind of rope, which went round his waist. They wen^ pretending to keep him back, or hold him from taking his llight. l*re- sontly this party was joined by other two, upon a similar errand, and they now seemed to try which could make tho greatest noise, or look the most unearthly. The thre'o bands, after a good deal of mancuuvring, i)roceeded, I think, to tho same chief's hou«'\ "I think it is generally supposed that these parties I have described are tho doctors of tho lied Indians, because their l»roceediiigs are called ' medicine work,' and ihoj ' medicine men ; ' but I find that tho medical profession is altogether a distinct business, and the doctors a distinct class. After investigation of the matter, I am led to conclude that these medical practitioners are, for the most part, those who havo themselves been visited with some serious sickness, and havo recovered ; or else have been, at some time in their lives, exposed to great peril, but have escaped uninjured. For instance, if a man or woman is taken in a fit, and remains motionless for so long that they are concluded dead, should such a one ultimately recover, that is the person who is regarded as competent to deal with diseases : for it is believed, that, during the period of unconsciousness, super- natural power and skill was vouchsafed them ; and alsf», by their recovering, it is concluded that they havo successfully resisted the effects of bad medicine, or the evil workings of some malevolent being. Still I do not mean to say that all their doctors arise from these circumstances, but mostly so. I believe that any shrewd or eccentric man may, by fasting, u :.^W, n' IH :l ' '■I ■ jiif ' I i Hi I I I 11- n 290 CURIOUS MODES OF CURE. Chap. XI. successfully prognosticating, or otherwise acting so as to excite the superstitious reverence of the people in his favour, secure a footing in this lucrative profession. " Next, as to the means employed by the doctors to recover patients. For pains in the body they employ a bag of hot ashes, after first placing a damp cloth on the skin. If the patient is afflicted with a pain in the head, they strike him on the place with small branches of tlie spruce-tree. For wounds they have a salve, but they seldom use it except in bad cases : the most ordinary method is simply to place a quantity of gum over the lips of the wound to keep them closed. For most of the diseases which afflict them, they have some herb or decoction which they give as a counteractant. " But the chief thing relied upon and resorted to, in case of failure of other means, is incantation. The instrument used is a rattle, generally in the shape of a bird or a frog, in the body of which a few small stones are placed.* This is whirled about the patient while a song is simg. Occasionally the doctor applies his ear, or his mouth, to the place where the pain or disorder chiefly rests. It is also very common, at this stage, to make incisions where the pain is felt, or to apply fire to the place by means of burning tinder made of dried wild flax. If relief follows these measures, tlie doctor asserts that he has extracted the foul substance that has done the mischief; which substance is supposed by them to be the bad or poisonous medicine some evil-disposed one had silently inserted into the invalid's body. At such an announcement made by the doctor, the patient, and the patient's friends, overjoyed at his success, liberally present him with such property as they have got. If, however, a relapse ensues, and the invalid dies, the doctor returns every particle of the property he has received^ When no relief follows the first * I have Hoon these rattles made of tlie bills of the homed puffin, three or four dozen being strung together.— AitTHOU. \p. XI. Chap. XI. SUPrOSED MALEVOLENT INFLUENCES. 2!)1 excite secure •ecover of hot If the ke him ?. Tor :cept in phice a 'p them ley have ctaiit. , in case strument k frog, in This is isionally Ice where mon, at to apply of dried ir asserts done the be the |d silently Lincement s friends, ith such le ensues, Ic of the the first Tin, three or trial, a more furious attack is nmde another time. If still without effect, there is but little hope of the patient's recovery. " Another curious matter connected with these operations is, that when the doctor has got pretty warm in his work, he boldly a-'-. <^« that he can see the soul of tlie patient, if it is present. i''or this he shuts his eyes for some time, and then pronounces his sentence. Either the soul is in its usual place, which is a good sign ; or it is out of its ja-oper i)laco, and seems wantiug to take its flight, which makes the patient's case doubtful ; or else it has flown away, in which case there is no hope for the invalid's recovery. The bold deceiver does not even hesitate to tell the people that the soul is like a fly in shape, with a long curved proboscis. " This people ascribe nearly all their bodily afllictions, and most deaths, to the secret working of malevolent persons. This being the case, when any person dies — if of any im- portance amongst them — and especially if suddenly, the friends of the deceased fix upon some one as the cause, either a slave, or a stranger just arrived in the camp, or, more ])ro- bably still, a person with whom the deceased has lately quarrelled. Whoever the victim is, however, whether man or woman, nothing short of his or her life will satisfy the bereaved jjcrsons. They believe in two ways an evil-» it J I' ll h ! 292 DANOKTl OF WHITES' PHESCRIBTNG. Chap. XT. !!, II HI I 'f!l , t' assist them a little with real medicine. I lienr that several white persons — some of Avhom are American missionaries — have been murdered for attempting this kindness, all because their medicine did not prevent death. There has not been a case of tliat sort among the Indians here yet ; but I see that the same superstitions which have led other Indians to commit murder are deeply rooted here, so that it behoves one to be cautious. I have already given medicine and advice to some, which the Lord has been pleased to bless : so that they are beginning to gain confidence and appreciate my coming amongst them. ]\Iy efforts in this way have as yet been nearly all confined to the Fort people ; but as the Indian women in here are generally the most influential in the tribe to which they belong, in gaining their confidence a great blow is struck at the prejudices of the people outside. " If one Indian is vexed with another, the most effectual way of showing his displeasure, next to killing him, is to say to him (what would be in English), B^ and hj, you will die. Not unfrequently the poor victim thus marked becomes so terrified that the prediction is verified. When this is the case, the friends of the deceased say that they have no doubt about the cause, and therefore (if they are able to meet the contest which may ensue) the prognosticator, on the first opportunity, is shot for his passionate language. " The young man named Clah, whom I have had to assist me in Tsimshean, only a little time before I came shot a woman, because by some silly expression she excited his belief that it was owing to her evil influence a piece of wood, which was being carried by some Indians, fell from their shoulders and seriously hurt one of them, a relative of his. Now I hear that this woman's son (although Clah has paid him 30 blankets) is watching his opportunity to revenge her death. Thus is the stream of murder fed from time to time. " In the majority of cases, I think the sick receive a great deal of attention from their friends. I have always found Chap. XI. MOUBNING FOR THE DEAD. 293 one or two nurses to an invalid, if tlie case was at all bad ; the sympathy of the nurses, too, seemed very great. It seemed to nie, however, that they never thought of washing the sick, for nearly all who had been laid n\) for any length of thne were literally immured in dirt. If any one suggested the propriety of a good Avash, they would immediately say they had no soap, which amounted to asking one to sup}»ly it, yet scarcely any are without ample means of purchasing it if they would. " AVJien a person dies, except in the case of a slave, very great lamentation is made by surviving friends. Their mourning lasts for several days. A few days ago, I saw a poor woman in the bush, at some distance behind the camp. She was sitting with her face towards the stump of a tree, and continued her bitter wailing for a long time. This is the second instance I have seen of this kind. Occasionally, mourners may be seen going about the beach. Only lately I saw a woman coming away from a house of death. She pro- ceeded along the beach to where another tribe is settled, and continued her woful cry all the way. Persons whom she passed took no notice whatever of her ; it seemed nothing strange to them. " Soon after death the corpse is conveyed away in a canoe to a distant part of the beach, and tiiere burned to ashes. ]\[ourners accomjiany it, and they make the air to ring with their piercing cries all the time the body is consuming. The ashes are collected and placed in a little house ajmointed to receive them. "A slave, after death, is at once placed in a canoe and thrown into the harbour, without any sorrow being expressed. The Tsimsheeans, I find, believe in two states after death : the one good, and the other bad ; the morally good are trans- lated to the one, and the morally bad are doomed to the other. The locality of the former they think to be above, and that of the latter is somewhere beneath. The enjoyment 2U-1 NOTIONS OF THE DEITY. Chap. XL iitp ' ■*:. \ t I IS of heaven and the privations of hell they understand to be carnal. " They do not suppose the wicked to be destitute of food any more than they were here, but they are treated as slaves and are badly clothed. " What is very strange, they imagine that as the various seasons leave them they advance to the abode of the wicked. For instance, when the fish get out of the reach of their nets, they suppose they are then becoming the prey of the wicked beneath. " The idea they entertain of God is that He is a great chief. They call him by the same term as they do their chiefs, only ad(h*ng the word for above — thus, * shimanyet ' is cliief, and ' lakkah ' above ; and hence the name of God with them is Shimanyet Lakkah. They believe that the Supreme Being never dies ; that he takes great notice of wliat is going on amongst men, and is frequently angry and punishes offenders. They do not know who is the author of the Universe, nor do they expect that God is the author of their own being. They have no fixed ideas about these things, I fully believe ; still they frequently appeal to God in trouble : they ask for pity and deliverance. In great extremities of sickness they address God, saying it is not good for them to die. " Sometimes, when calamities are prolonged or thicken, they get enraged against God, and vent their anger against Him, raising their eyes and hands in savage anger to Heaven, and stamping their feet on the ground. They will reiter.ate language which means 'You are a great slave!' This is their greatest term of reproach. By far the most prominent trait of character in this people is pride, yet many other of the corruptions of our fallen nature they exhibit in de- plorable measure. Kevenge with them, which is their only way of adjusting wrongs, is so dire and determined that many years and change of circumstances cannot extinguish it. Several instan(.'es have been known where it has burst lAP. XI. I to be 3f food ( slaves various wicked, ir nets, wicked it chief. ifs, only ief, and them is 3 Being oing on Tenders. nor do They ^e ; still for pity address thicken, against Heaven, reiterate This is eminent other of i in de- eir only led that :tinguish las burst CUAP. Xi. REVENGE AND rillDE. 295 forth in terrible vengeance more than twenty years after its birth, and simply because an opportunity to satisfy it never occurred before. But, as I said before, pride or conceit is the passion they most strikingly exhibit. It is astonishing what they will do or suffer in order to establish or maintain dignity. Yesterday a young man fell down, and cut himself a little with an axe. On arriving home, his father imme- diately announced his intention to destroy some property which was to save his son from any disgrace attached to the accident. When a few people or friends were collected to witness the brave act, the father would carry out his vow, with no small show of vanity. I hear that instances are numerous where persons who have been hoarding up pro- perty for ten, fifteen, or twenty years (at the same time almost starving themselves for want of clothing), have given it all away to make a show for a few hours, and to be thought of consequence." I come now to the Indians of the interior, of whom, how- ever, I regret to say, much less is known than of those upon the coast. At and about the entrance of the Fraser Eiver is the Kwantlun tribe : they live in villages which extend along the banks of the river as far as Langlcy. Next to these, and extending from Langley to Yale, are the Smess, Chill way- hook, Pallalts, and Teates — which latter are called by the upper tribes Sa-chin-ko. These all appear, from their simi- larity of language and customs, to be branches of the Kwantlun tribe, although, as usual, their dialects differ con- siderably. They have villages placed on the tributary streams as well as the main river. The Smess Indians occupy the Smess river and lake, and the Chill wayhooks the river and lake of that name. In the summer, however, they nearly all congregate on the banks of the Fraser River to fish. As every village seems to have an old long-standing feud with ■■V i \ f. "A I ■ r (1.4 206 INDIANS OF THE INTERIOR. CuAr. xr. ;) P some of their neighbours — ^vhic'h what lias been said of their revengeful spirit readily accounts for — constant bickerings and frequent murdisrs signalise these annual gatherings. For these reasons, and to guard against the incursions of the <;oast-tribes for slaves, the permanent villages are all stock- aded — a measure which, though more common here than on the coast, is sometimes resorted to there, as at Cape Mudge. It is a curious fact that, though living in a constant state of alarm, no Indians in this country ever keep watch at night. To be sure, they always have a number of barking curs about the lodges, but these are easily bought over by cun- ning foes, with food, &c,, and thus their villages have no real protection against the night attacks which are sometimes made upon them. I have frequently suggested the propriety of keeping watch when in my travels we camped near strange villages, but never could get them to do it. I be- lieve this to be from superstitious dread of spirits, as they are not the least afraid to be out at night looking for deer, fishing, or stealing. Yale i"* the limit to the wanderings of the above-mentioned tribes, and at Spuzzum, a village six miles above the Canon, a race very different both in habits and language is found. These are the Nicouta-much or Nicouta-meens, a branch of a widely-extended tribe. They, with their cognate septs, tlie At-naks or Shuswap-much, occupy the Fraser Kiver from Spuzzum to the frontier of that part of the country called by the Hudson Bay Company New Caledonia, wliich is within a few miles of Fort Alexandria (about 330 miles from tlie river's mouth), making the extent of their wanderings about 250 miles. From Thompson River other septs of this race — the Shu- swajis, Skowtous, Okanagans, Spokans, Skoi-el-jwi (of Colville), Pend'oreilles, and Ca^urs d'Aleines — occupy the country as far as the Fhithead Passes of the Rocky Mountains, where Chap. XI. ESTIMATED INDIAN POPULATION, 20"; the Sae-lies or Flatlioads form the eastern portion of the race. The Rocky Mountains on one hand, and an imaginary line running east and west 00 to 100 miles south of the parallel of 49° N. lat., may be said to define the tract occu- pied by these people between the Tliompson llivcr and the Flathead country. Mr. A. C. Anderson, who has travelled a great deal in this country, estimates the number of Nicouta-meen and Shuswap- much Indians mustering annually on the Fraser at COOO or 8000. He considers that in North- West America, generally, there is not more than one man to ten square miles, although this poiralation is not by any means distributed evenly over tlie country, which would make it appear more dense in those parts best known. This estimate would give an Indian l)opulatiou of about 20,000, which I fancy is not far wrong. Between the liocky IMountains, the Upper Columbia and its tributary the Killuspehn or Pend'oreille, and watered by an intermediate stream called the Kootanais Iliver, is an an- gular piece of country peopled by a small, isolated tribe, bearing the same name as the last-mentioned river, on the banks of which they principally live. This country of the Kootanais being very poor, they have to cross the liocky ]\[ountains for the buffalo, and when there they are constant'y attacked, murdered, or driven back by the Blackfeet. Tlius they are constantly diminishing. Isolated, and speaking a language of their own, it is not easy to imagine their origin ; but it appears probable that they once belonged to some more powerful southern tribe, from which they became cut off by the intervention of larger tribes. Mr. Anderson says they are brave and possess more than ordinary virtue. Their country is very difficult to get at, either by land or water, as the Kootanais River is too rapid for navigation, and only fordable or passable for horses in spring before the melting of the snow, and in the autumn when it is beginning to freeze again. In 1848 Mr. Anderson was travelling among -»^' '*V>^ 298 ESTIMATED INDIAN POPULATION. CUAP. XI. these Indians, and ho made his interpreter take a census, witli the following results : — Men. Lads. ■\V(iiiien and Cliililrcn. Total. Upptr Kootunais Koutimaia who visit FlatUead couutry Lower Kqotanais or Arc Plattca 35 44 78 18 39 40 113 183 273 ICO 200 397 157 103 509 829 The number of this tribe, however, is now probably reduced to about 500 or GOO. All the natives of the Upper Fraser are called by the Hudson Bay Company, and indeed generally, *' Porteurs," or carriers, and as I have shown, when speaking of travelling in this country, they well deserve the name. It originated from their bearing a corresponding designation among their north- ern neighbours, the " Beaver " Indians. They (the Beavers) call themselves Ta-cuUy, or Tah-killy, signifying " wanderers on the deep." They form the western branch of the great Cliipewyan tribe, a race whose wanderings extend from Fort Churchill on Hudson Bay, and thence far north coterminously with the Esquimaux of the coast. In 1839 j\rr. Anderson estimated the population of this northern district of British Columbia, then New Caledonia, as follows : — At M'Leod's Lake Chilcotiii .. Alcxaiiilria Fort George Connolly Ijake . Babino Lake . Fraser Lake . Stuart Lake Men, Women. Children. 49 40 113 224 132 244 292 223 232 75 50 62 28 30 87 09 47 65 98 87 100 02 79 147 897 688 1040 Total. 202 000 747 187 135 181 285 288 2025 Their number has probably been much decreased since ciiAP. xr. SHELL CURRENCY. 299 that tiino, though from the wilthiess of this region and tlio absence of white men they may liavo ke})t up their num- bers mucli better than the tribes neann- the coast liave done. Tliere is a curious currency used by the lluds(m IJay Company in trading with these natives, viz. Haiqua shell, wliicli I have mentioned as being worn in the under-lip of the northern Coast Indians. This little shell is obtained off Mootka Sound. It is found clinghig in clusters to the rocks in deep water, and is dragged up by the Indians with long poles and hooks. They (the Nootkas) sell them to the Comi)any at Fort llupcrt and other coast posts, and they are sent n\t to tlio interior to be used as money ; tlie inland Indians having a great partiality for them, and using tliem in large strings, much in the same way, I fancy, as the Eastern North Ameri- can Indians use the celebrated wampum-belts. Almost all the tribes mentioned in the above census inhabit the country west of the Fraser River, or between it and the coast, and they all visit the coast more or less frequently, their journeys dei)endiug chiefly upon the supply of salmon, &c., in their own districts. The routes by which they go are as yet little known. Some have been exi)lored lately, and one or two by earlier employes of the Hudson Bay and North- West Companies, including among their number Sir A. M'Kenzie. Of these, however, it will be remembered that I have spoken when describing the inlets along the coast, and discussing the probability of a practicable route being found from the sea to the upper part of British Columbia, from the head of some one or other of them. Some of the interior tribes spend half their year inland and half at the coast : for instance, the " Loquilt " Indians have their home in the winter on Lake Anderson and the surrounding district, whence they descend to the coast in Jervis Inlet in the summer ; while the Chilcotin Indians spend much of their time at Bellhoula in the Bentinck Inlet. The natives eastward of the Fraser, viz. the Skowtous, V''*'.rH' % '■ ■ ■• It »'3«l/*l«., .y.„».^,. ^,„„ '»» If' f ' t r k. i .- w ■ •r .::■! t ii fie? 300 LOW STATK OF MORALS. Chap. XL Sluiswap, Okanagun, &c., own numbers of liorsos, and are for the most part mounted. I have already, wliilo narrating my travels in British Columbia, alluded to the feeling of respect wliieh the traveller entertains generally towards mounted Indians. After being used to the dwarfed natives of the coast, whose limbs have assumed almost the shape of the canoe that is their constant home, it is startling to come among the fine athletic Indians of the interior, and to behold the skill and courage with which they manage their half-wild horses, and train themselves in tlie sports of peace for war. These tribes, as I have before said, are not addicted to slavery as a trade, which probably conduces much to their sni)erior moral condition. Virtue is not, however, I fear, much more regarded as a principle and motive of action among these poor people than by tlie Indians of the coast, although their comparative seclusion and freedom from foreign influences preserve them from that utter abandonment of decency which is found near the white settlements. I remember discussing this question, when I was staying at Fort Kamloops, with an employe of the Company, who had been eight or ten years in the country ; and he said he had only heard of one instance of an Indian woman expressing any other ground for chastity than the fear of some man, father or husband. In this solitary f.'use, he said, uj)on the man assuring her that her deeds would never be known, she said, " There is One who knows eveiything ;" and as she spoke she pointed to the sky. I think he said this girl was an Okanagan. IMr. Anderson, whom I have before quoted, asserts that these Indians are much more virtuous than those of the coast, but from the conversations I have had with various traders living among them, I am inclined to fear that any difference there may be, is, as I have said above, owing to force of circumstances rather than to any fixed principle. As may readily be supposed, the tastes of these Indians for Chap. XI. FOOD AND CLOTHING. 301 ]inntin<^ and riding tends to niako tliom less industrious tlum tlio metre sedentary Coast natives, and tlioy are, I Itelievo, less prpvident. Since the discovery of gold, especially, many have taken to gold-washing in the summer instead of laying by a winter stock, and the result has been that, during the 8«werity of winter, they have died of starvation in grcMit num- bers. Their principal food is salmon, venison, bear, wild sheep, and berries, mosses, and lichens. The princijtal of these latter is tlio black lichen {L. jubatus), called by them Whyelkine, of which I have already spoken. Far inland, and occasionally even in the neighbourhood of the coast, may still bo seen the deer-skin dress, ornamented with beads and porcupine-quills, in which Indians are always represented in pictures ; but shirts and trowsers are so easily obtained, and save so much trouble, that most of the men now wear them, while the women use blankets, generally white, though sometimes blue or red, and fastened in the same wav. They also make capes of bark, similar to their mats. These are generally trimmed with fur round the edge, and go over the head like a South American poncho. They only reach to the elbows, and are seldom worn except in wet weather. Like the Sea-shore Indians, they generally go bare-headed, although many may be seen wearing the blue cap with a leather peak, commonly used by mariners, and ornamented with some feathers or ribbons. Mocassins are much more generally worn than at the coast : these are sometimes very neatly ornamented with beads, but often they are mere pieces of deer-skin laced round the foot. Frequently, how- ever, they ride about barefooted, holding the piece of cord, which serves both as stirrup-leather and stirrup, between the first and second toes. They occasionally wear leggings made of cloth, and very prettily ornamented with beads. Nearly all use the Spanish wooden saddle, which they make with much skill ; and the bridle is a simple cord, often tlie / ii a I II I' I ill III fit ti! ::l I I' I. ,vhen it is on the point of falling, with some still more frenzied appeal to the (iroat Spirit, and sometimes, I have been tohl, shooting an arrow into the cloud to burst it, when it is evident the rain is on the point of descending in torrents. The Indians never appear to lose their faith in the operator's power, however long he may have kejtt them waiting; but as all the shrewder men of the tribe are or desire to be medicine-men, this is not much to bo wondered at. The children of all these tribes have their heads llattened, more or less, and the women carry tbem in the same curious little cradles slung at their backs : these are made, I believe, of the bark of cypress, and look like little canoes. The child lies at full length, and the sides of the cradle are sulliciently high to enable the mother to lace it in by a cord passed from side to side, a small block being put at one end as a pillow. AVhe;.. the mother is travelling she carries the cradle on her back in a nearly upright position, with the head just ai>[)car- ing above her shoulder ; but if she is working, she suspends the infant from a pliant branch of a tree, or sticking a i)olo in the ground at a slight angle hangs the cradle, sometimes upright, sometimes horizontally, on the end of it. They move pole and cradle so as to keep it near them, and every now and then give it a swing, so that it rocks up and down. It is said that when children die they are often put in some lake or pool in their cradles and left to float about them, the natives regarding the water as sacred ever after ; but I fancy this is more common on the east side of the mountains than the west. "i< .,-^11 ■^i iaJm , s; 304 MODES OF SEPULTURE, AND DIALECTS. Chap. XL ill *^''! !lt!r! ti < ill Like tlio Coast Indians, they frequently bury their dead in trees, and whenever tliey are laid on the ground they always cover the lid of the coffin with stones. I have heard this custom attributed, as I have before said, to some instinctive feeling tliat the dead will rise again ; but I am inclined to believe it is only done to protect them from the wild animals of the forest. I have seen some coffins also r.aised on posts, six or eight feet above the ground, when there were no trees to put them in. I do not think they are ever guilty of bury- ing alive, though, as I have said of the Coast natives, they are very careless of and cruel to the old men and women when they get past work, and will often leave them to starve. The dialects of the Indians of the interior are numerous as among those of the island and shore. When I was at Pavilion, on the Upper Fraser, a man who had been there many years, and who had travelled much among them, told me that between that place and Alexandria, a distance of some 120 miles, there were nine dialects spoken, and that these differed so much as to be almost distinct languages. It will be many years before much more than this is likely to be known of them. Indeed, it is probable, if not certain, if the white emigration continues and the colony progresses, that, before any opportunity of the kind comes, the tribes who use them will have almost, if not entii'ely, vanished from the face of the earth. ::i Chap. XU. EARLY PROTESTANT MISSIONS. ;?();■) CHAPTER XII. 5^ 'K -♦o^ Religious and Educational condition of the Colonics. In speaking of the religious and educational condition of these Colonies, I j)urpose to glance shortly at the position which the Church of England has already assumed in that distant land, dwelling next upon the missionary efforts of those who, iu carrying the Christian religion to its Indian inhabitants, have undertaken labours, and striven success- fully through difficulties of no ordinary character. Fore- most among these, as the earliest Protestant missionary to our possessions in the North Pacific, and the successful introducer of education among the neglected Indian children of its shores, is that Mr. William Duncan whose name is already familiar to the reader of these pages. The journals and letters, published and unpublished, of this gentleman have been most kindly placed in my hands by the Secretary of the Church Missionary Society. And in the following ac- count of the religious and educational condition of ]>ritish Columbia and Vancouver Island, it will bo found that I have used them largely. Before 1857 no Protestant missionary had ever traversed the wilds of Britisli Columbia, nor had any attempts been made to instruct the Indians. At Victoria the Hudson Bay Company had a chaplain stationed, but lie was devoted entirely to the white settlers. I must excei>t the exertions of the Roman Catholic priests. If the opinion of the Hudson Bay people of the interior is to be relied upon, they effected no real change in the condition of the natives. 'J'he sole Hi '.11 'i1' 306 ROMANIST MISSIONS. Chap. XII. 'lit i Kill >H' ! Ill ni' ill .,. Ill Im fill ' : 'H' hi I .III if ':':^ I '•i: i!* i\M ii ■• ''• s result of their residence among them was, that the Indians who had been brought untler tlicir influence had imbibed some notions of the Deity, almost as vague as their own traditions, and a superstitious respect for the priests themselves, which they showed by crossing themselves devoutly whenever they met one. Occasionally, too, might be seen in their lodges, pictures purporting to represent the roads to Heaven and to Hell, in which there was no single suggestion of the danger of vice and crime, but a great deal of the peril of Pro- testantism. These coloured prints were certainly curious in their way, and worth a passing notice. They were large, and gave a pictorial history of the human race, from the time when Adam and Eve wandered in the garden together, down to the Reformation. Here the one broad road was split into two, whose courses diverged more and more painfully. By one way the Roman Catholic portion of the world were seen trooping to bliss ; the other ended in a steep bottomless preci['ice over which the Protestants might be seen falling. Upon the more sensible and advanced of the Indians, teaching such as this had little effect. I remember the chief of the Shuswap tribe, at Kamloops, pointing out to me sucli an illustration hanging on his wall, and laughingly saying, in a tone that showed quite plainly how little credence he attached to it, " There are you and your people," putting his finger as he spoke on the figures tumbling into the pit. Of such kind was the only instruction that the Indians had received prior to 1857. Its influence was illustrated in that year at Victoria, where a Roman Catholic Bishop and several priests had been resident for some time, and were known to have exerted themselves among the Soughio Indians, who reside tliere. A cross had been raised in their village, and some of them had been baptized ; but when these were called before the bishop for confirmation, they refused to come unless a greater present of blankets was made to them than had been given at their baptism. The bishop was sjiid to have Chap. XIT. THE CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 07 boon very angiy with the priests when this came to his know- ledge : he having very j)ossibly been deceived by them as to tlie condition of the Indians. I am informed that ho had a large lieart painted u[)on canvas, through which he drew a blanket, and represented it to tlie Indians as symbolical of their condition. Upon H.]\r.S. 'Satellite' being commissioned in 1850, Captain Prevost offered to give a free passage to a missionary if the Church Missionary Society would send one. Tliis Society, which had been endowed by an anonymous benefactor with the sum of 500/. to be devoted to sucli a purpose, ofl'ered the work to Mr. Duncan, who had been trained at the Highbury College, and who readily accepted it. The ' Satellite' sailed in December, 1850, and reached Vancouver Island in June, 1857, when JMr. J3uncan, whose name is now known and beloved by almost every Indian in the two colonies, at once prepared to commence his labours. After somo question with the colonial autliorities as to where he should begin his work, considerable desire being expressed on the Hudson Bay Company's part to place him at Nanaimo, it AAas determined that he should go to Fort Simpson on our northern boundary. This spot had been previously fixed upon by the Society at home for the scene of ]Mr. Duncan's labours. The Indians there were known to be more free from the contagion of the white man, and w(}ro assembled in larger numbers than at any other place on the coast. Another advantage possessed by this locality was that at Simpson the trade of the fort brought a great number of different tribes together. Indeed the tribe of the Tsini- sliceans, among whom Mr. Duncan's labours have been most productive of good, had b ^en attracted to Fort Simpson from another spot on this account, and had since settled there altogether. From June till October, 1857, My. Duncan found it necessary to remain at Victoria, being unable to g(;t a passage X 2 ^:^m 308 MISSION OF Ml{. DUNCAN. Chap. XIT. t««' ^ % \i*t to Fort Simpson, a distanco of 800 miles, until tlio Hudson Bay Company's steamer should proceed thither. This in- terval, however, he employed most profitably in learning the language of tlie Indians among whom he was intending to reside (the Tsimsheeans), and otherwise in i)reparing for the work before him. Upon his arrival at Simpson, IMr. Duncan was, in pursuance of orders to that effect given by the Governor, quartered in the Fort of the Hudson Bay Company, and one of the smaller houses was allotted to him, which was large enough for a school, as well as for his dwelling. In the Fort he found eighteen men assembled — one Scotch, one English, three Sandwich Islanders, and thirteen French Canadians, each having an Indian woman living with him. Tliere were also seven children, and he was told there were some half-breed children scattered about the camp, who, if he pleased, might be received in the Fort for instruction. On Sunday, the 11th October, he first performed Divine borvice in this the scene of his new and arduous labours, and on the 13th he opened scliool with but five half-breed boys belonging to the Fort as pupils, the eldest not five years old. Speaking of this he wi-ites, " I am very glad for their sakes that they are so young. These I intend to teach in English. Their parents seem exceedingly delighted. I did think of taking a few half-breed children out of the camp, but I find they have been so long abandoned by their fathers that they have forgotten every word of English, and become so mnch like the Indians that I shall be obliged to deal with them as such." A few days after, writing upon the same subject, he says, " To-day a chief called, whose principal anxiety was to ascertain whether I intended giving dollars to the Indians, to get them to send their children to school. I think I shamed him a little, at least I tried to do so, for entertaining sucli a selfish notion. I have a good many visitors, and all seem Chap. XII. COMMENCEMENT OF HIS LABOURS. 301) desirous of ingratiating therasolves ; some by referring me to numerous papers wliieli tliey bring, obtained in general from the Company's officers. Tfiese papers, liowever, rarely say more for them than that they are influential men and great bi^ggars. Other of my visitors, not blessed with papers, will tell me Avliat good hearts they have, and how rich and in- fluential they are." I may, in reference to this remark of 3[r. IJuncan, mention that the fashion of producing their testimonials to visitors is common among all the Indians. You rarely come across one of any importance in liis tribe, but he produces three or four papers, carefully kept in a box, and smelling horribly ; while every Indian who does anything for you expects a testimonial as well as payment for his services. Of course they do not know what is said of them ; and I have had papers shown mo that, had their contents been known to the bearer, he would have been by no means proud of exhibiting. Speaking also of their habit of begging, Mr. Duncan says : — " AVhen they beg, which is generally the case, I mostly satisfy and always lessen their expectations by saying I have not come to trade. This opens a way to telling them what I have come to do for them; and in every case, as soon as my object is realised, I hear the oft- repeated *Ahm, ahm' (Good, good), and their faces exhibit every expression of joy of which they are susceptible. I make a practice of telling all, that I shall expect their assist- ance in erecting a school-room outside the I'ort as soon as I can talk their language a little better. Without exception they assent to my proposal ; but whether they will be ready to act when the time comes, remains to be seen. I already see several difficulties in the way ; their jealousies and feuds arc not the least. It is a pity we cannot put tJieir sincerity to the test at once, but I feel it would not be prudent to do so. The winter is at hand, and their long and all-absorbing medicine-feasts come with it ; besides, I do not yet feel possessor of so much of their tongue as such a work would r ■ . ^i I ,# m ., I 'I. n r. in" V ( '"^ 111) 5- i- p-r miff .si! ir! Hi: Jin*' 810 THE FIRST HOLIDAY. Chap. XII. require. However, I hope by the carrying out of what is ah-eady begun in tlio Fort, and what I intend yet to com- mence, under God's blessing, to keej) alive at least, if not increase, the desire already awakened around me for instruc- tion." On many other occasions IMr. Duncan mentions the visits of chiefs and otliers while his school was going on, and of the seriousness of their looks when he and his pupils knelt in prayer, and the invariable " Ahm, alim " which followed a spectacle so novel to them. But although this approval was manifested by so many individuals, it had little or no effect on the conduct of the mass ; and the scenes of cruelty and horrible murder which he had, and even still has, to witness, would daunt the heart of a less brave and earnest man. The first holiday whicli he gave his scholars, is thus described by him : — " This afternoon (December 9, 1857) I assembled my little boys for a breaking-up for a few days. They came clean and nicely dressed, with hearts ever so joyful. The father of each boy, and another visitor or two, were present. AVe sang several hymns, and I then gave each of them a present, and after a little drilling they marched away. Their fathers seemed highly gratified. I did not let the little fellows read or repeat catechism (both of which they can do a little), as they were so excited. Thus I feel," he continues, " as though something had been done these last two months. May God prosper the small beginning, and make it the earnest of a great future harvest." Nor had IMr. Duncan confined himself to educational efforts. Already his influence for good was being felt by the Indians, and men of importance in their tribes had come to him for aid and advice. " To-day," he writes, " a chief came who is suffering from a bad cough, and seems Avasting away. He very anxiously desired relief ; but it is of no use giving them any medicine CUAP. XII. HIS INFLUENCE ON ADULTS. 311 for such complaints, as their liabits prevent any good effects ensuing. I perceived he wanted to tell mo something serious by his countenance. Like a man about to take a long journey, he seemed gasjnng for directions about the way. Oh ! how I longed to tell him my message, but could not. I made him understand that I should soon bo able to teach them about God, that I had His book with me which I should teach from, and my object was to make them good and happy His constant response Avas 'Alim, alim' (Good, good). Upon another occasion the same man asked to see ' Shimanyet Lak-kah Shahounak ' (God's book). His anxious gaze and sighs showed me how he longed to know its contents, while I, too, longed to tell him. Again and again I mentioned the name of our Saviour. I could do little else." Upon another occasion he writes : — " To-day the chief officer came to me while I was busy with my Indian scholars, and asked to speak to me privately. I went aside with liim, and he began telling me that an Indian woman, who is living with one of the white men in the Fort, had been treating lier slave (a poor girl) very unmercifully while we were at Divine service yesterday. He wished me to go and speak to the woman, for he believed if she was not interfered with the slave would be certain to lose her life. At first I objected, on account of my inability to speak her language sufficiently ; but presently I thought I would go, for I could see that although it was necessary to be done, the man who lives with her dared not, for peace sake, and the captain dared not, for conscience sake, undertake the duty : I accordingly went, having first asked the counsel and blessing of God. I found her washhig clothes, and, although somewhat soured in expres- sion, she g]-eeted me with her usual recognition of respect. I commenced telling her in English what 1 had come for, which she quickly understood, and hung her head over the w.ishing- tub and remained motionless wliile I spoke. I used as kind M-i' 312 THE FIRST CHRISTMAS DAY. Chap, XII. I!*;- ! ! a tono as I could command, and when I had finished I wished her good morning; to wliich she very solemnly responded. This evening her husband has been at school, and from liira I learnt that she had been weeping nearly all the day. Almost immediately after school the woman, with tears in her eyes, came to see me. Her face told the son*ow that was awakened within, and how bitterly she had been mourning. One of the men was with me at the time, so I desired him to go away, for I saw she wished to unburthen her mind ; but she pre- vented him from doing so, wishing to use him as an interpreter. Then, with her eyes upon the ground and her heart sobbing with grief, she commenced to unfold her feelings : the man interpreted. I then explained my mind a little more fully to her, hoped she would amend, and then shook hands with her. I need hardly say how her countenance brightened, and how relieved she seemed when she went away. This was the first woman I ever reproved, and she a Red Indian, a heathen, and of naturally a proud and haughty temper. The result seemed to astonish me. AVas it not of the Lord ? I thought how much more like a Christian she had acted than many who call themselves such would have done." Such scenes show how susceptible of improvement these people are. Speaking of the first Christmas Day that Mr. Duncan passed at Fort Simpson, he writes : — " This day has passed off much better than I ex2)(.jted. In the morning we had Divine service, when fifteen men and four boys werfe present — the greatest number we have ever had. After breakfast (according to usual custom here) the men had each a p'nt and a half of rum served out to them, and therefore I feel not a little tliankful that so many should have put aside the temp- tation and come to service. From two sources I have had an account of the wretched way in which Christmas Days have been spent, and glad I am to have seen things so orderly and quiet to-day. Many have expressed their astonishment at the great and sudden change ; but to me it only appears yet Chap. XI F. LABOURS HEYOND THE FORT. 313 an outward oliange, such a ono as man is able to effect in and by hiniselt'. I am waiting and longing for that change which only God can effect : when I see this, I will rejoice indeed." AVitli the commencement of the new year he began his labours among the Indians outside the Fort : — " Though I was not in a position to do them much good, still I thought I would at least go uihI see them all, and endeavour to win a little of their esteem and confidence." " It would be impossible to give a full description," he says, " of this my first general visit to the Indians in their houses, for the scenes were too exciting and too crowded to admit of it. I confess that cluster after cluster of these half-naked and pahited savages round their fires was to my unaccustomed eyes very alarming ; but the reception I met with was truly wonderful and encouraging. On entering a house I Avas greeted by one, two, or three of the principal personages with * Clali-ho>v-yah,' which is the complimentary term used in the trading jargon. This would be repeated several times ; then a general movement and a squatting ensued, followed by a breathless silence, during which every eye was fixed on me. After a little time several would begin nodding and smiling, at the same time in a low tone reiterating * Ahm ahm-ah-ket — ahm shimanyet' (Good, good person, good chief). In some houses they would not be content till I took the chief place near the fire, and always placed a mat upon a box for mo to sit upon. JMy inquiries after the sick were always followed by anxious glances and deep sighs : a land of solemn awe would spread itself at once. I found forty-seven sick, and three in a state of lunacy." It appears that the officer in charge here, some years before, took an account of the Indians, and very soon after great nuu^bers were swept away by measles. Of course tlie Indians attributed the calamity to their being numbered, and upon this occasion Mr. Duncan found that they were not free from certain superstitious fears : " still in lany houses," ho says, ^idffl .r^llE Hi ■S,t Vi 314 DESIRE FOR INSTRUCTION. Chap. XIT. tl ^^i " they told me of the cliflerenco they placed upon the motive of his visits and mine. IMany were inclined to think that the very contrary would result from my visit." Poor creatures I when the horrors of illness to them, with no kind of relief, no hope, and often the most barbarous treatment by their doctors are considered, it is not surprising that they should have a superstitious dread of anything that appears likely to bring disease among them. I remember once seeing a man at a village in Cowitdien with his face frightfully scarred by fire, which they told me was applied to burn out the evil spirit that was making him ill. More than once Mr. Duncan reverts to their desire for know- ledge : — " There is one cheering feature connected with this people which my visit has prominently sliown me, that is, they are longing for instruction. The i)resence of the Avhites and their own visits to the south have shaken their supersti- tion and awakened inquiry; but that is all. There is a general belief amongst them that the whites do possess some grand secret about eternal things, and they are gas[)ing to know it. This is the propitious moment. Oh that the people of God were awake to their responsibility, duty, and privi- lege!" Again, a little later, he says, " My Indian interpreter tries every day to lift up the veil a little higher to let me see his people. He assures me that the Indians are wanting to hear what is good, and are even becoming impatient. They have begun to think that the Fort people are monopolizing my time and attention in order to keep them in ignorance. An Indian, who is very much feared, wanted to see me teach a night or two since ; but they would not let him stop in the Fort. On going away he said to tlie officer that he and his people wanted to learn to be good, but the Fort people stood in the way. The same man told my Indian the other day that when he was in his own house he always felt angry and wanted to murder somebody, but as soon as he came within CUAP. XII. THE SCHOOL-HOUSE COMMENCED. 315 the precincts of the Fort ho felt quite pood, which change he attributed to my being in tlie Fort. Tlie socret of it is, lie is mostly in the Fort-yurd when I cross to or from breukfast, and I always give him a pleastnit lot>k and a kind word, and these jjroduco what he attributes to magic." In the autumn of 1858, ^Fr. Duncan commenced building his school-house outside the Fort, a work in which the Indians greatly assisted, providing plank and bark for the roof, to the value, he estimated, of at least five pounds. " I had," ho says, " to go to every house to receive their donations, which were presented with a givat deal of cere- mony and good feeling. jMany took boards ofl' their own roof to give me, and some even the pieces that formed part of their bed." And on November 12th, ho writes in his journal : — " Uy jMonday next, the 15th, I hope the plastering of the school-house will be dry enough for whitewashing, and then how glad I shall be that this troublesome work is over. I have had many unforeseen dilliculties and vexations to con- tend with, but out of them all the Lord has carried me." A few days before this he recounts his first nig) it-visit to the Indian encampment. " Last night was the first time I had ventured out in the camp during dark. It was to see a poor dying woman, sister to the late head chief. I had seen her three or four times before, but could do her no good ; still, as her friends had come to the Fort desiring aid, I accompanied them back. On arriving at the house, I found the sick woman laid before a large fire, round which some twenty Indians were squatted. After administering a little medicine, I began speaking to them a few words which the solemn scene suggested. I showed them oui" condition, and only remedy in Jesus our adorable Saviour, adding, too, upon what conditions we were saved by Him. They all understood what 1 said, and two of the women that sat close at the head of the sick person very earnestly reiterated to her my words, and questioned her if ■m ,.>'.,' ft^ I yi« MI!. DUNCAN'S IMKXiUESS. Chap. XIF. she uiulor.stood tlicin. It was, I tliiiik, the most solomn scono I liiivu witnoss(Ml siiKM! I luivo been hero. lU'loro I went uwjiy, Olio mail said that slio and hor pt'oplo did not know about God, but tlioy wanted to know, and k'arn to bo good." I cannot, perhaps, do bettor than to allow Mr. Duncan to tell, in his own words, the progress of liis teaching during the winter of IS.")!!. " November IG. — I have, these last few days, been making- some si)ecial visits to inform the Indians what are my inten- tions and hopes with respect to commencing the school. In a few houses I was also enal)led to set forth the blessed truths of the Gospel. In every house I was attentively listened to, and greeted in their warmest way. " The season in which the d(!ep heathenism and darkness of this people is manifested has just set in. My heart was gladdened, however, to-day by the chiefs of our tribe coming to my house to say that they had made up their minds to abandon these sorceries, or medicine-work. Since then I have heard of another tribe that has made the same reso- lution ; and on a visit to an old chief yesterday afternoon, I gathered frouj him that his tribe were meditating the same thing. Thus 1 feel thankful to God that one heathenish custom, and that one decidedly the most gross and deejjly rooted, is tottering, and ready to fall, since three tribes out of the nine here have already declared against it. Whenever I speak against this medicine-making, as it is called, I am sure to be reminded of its long existence as a custom of great importance among them. *' My class of Indians, resident in the Fort, which I have been teaching of a night at my house from the black-board, have begun reading in books to-night. The books are of my own making, and I add a little each day. This measure I have adopted more as a stimulant to the Indians outside than anything else. When they see these little books, and hear their own people read and explain them, I think that a good 41 Chap. XII, THE PCIIOOL-IIorSE FINISHED. r.r ofl'er't will 1)0 ])r()(liu'e(l. Very little tliinpfs, I linvc itlrciidy Icnirnt, eitlior (]i)iu> or said ainonj; tliis pcojilc, jtroduco iirccts, cithor for n^ood or evil, in coinm(Mi('inr, that what I now see is really nothing compared with what tlio system is when properly carried out. They tell me that they were afraid i") cast the custom away all in one year, but would rather that pa-^ should do so this year, and tlie remainder next ; so, according to this, I sincerely hope that this is the last winter any of these savage practices will be seen. " Nov. 23. — r)oth yesterday and to-day we mustered about one hurdred children, and fi >i forty to lifty adults- at school. Every clay shows me more ' iid more what a dense mass of ii 'In ^i'"f' :■:-',£. ■ ■-*■«» I 320 FEELINGS OF THE INDIANS. Chap. XII. ^■.•i B i '.! '• ^\ik. ignorance I have come into contact with. I have also now to meet all the evil reports continually emanating from very evil and superstitious persons. Some are watching, I believe, for a calamity to arise and explode the work. Others are in suspense, hoping we shall succeed, but feel afraid we cannot. Some keep a scrutinizing eye over all our movements, and when they feel satisfied we have no tricks to injure them, I suppose they will countenance us. But we go on, and I am glad to hear every day, in contrast with the incessant and horrid drumming of the medicine-men, the sweet sound of our steel, calling numbers to hear and learn the way of life. " On leaving the school tliis morning, I spoke to a man who is of considerable power and influence in the camp, as to why he did not send his children to school, and come himself. He replied that he was waiting till the Indians had done witli their foolishness and dancing, which time was not far distant, then he would come. He both wanted himself and his children to learn, but would not come yet, as it is not good, he said, to mix his ways and mine together. H(} intended soon to give up his, and then he would come to school. This afternoon he just dropped in to school simply as a gazer : ho would join in nothing. Nevertheless, ho heard a sliort ad- dress, which I gave in Tsimsheean, and wliich I hope will not be lost to him. It was the first of the Gospel he ever heard, for he was not here when I gave my addresses in the summer. " "Nov. 25. — This morning about 140 children, and, in tlie afternoon, about 120. Adults seldom vary i'roni about fifty each time. I am glad to see already an improvement in their appearance, so far as cleanliness is concerned. I inspect them daily. Some few have Aontured to come with their faces painted, but we have less of it daily. A good many, too, have cast away thtir nose-rings, yet some come who have very large ones in use still. " I visited three sick persons to-day, und was able to s[)eak Chap. XII. DIFFICULTIES OF THE CONVERTS. 321 to two about our Saviour. One of thoni had been very anxious to see me ; au at him I saw h(! V -1 m "t; t. HI K i i It! I «i !| ! I ii ,t ■ t ll . 1! ■ f I r : • 'Si ! 1 1 M! Ii h ;J21 ENCOUNTER WITH MEDICINE-PARTY. Ciiai-. XII. was looking very much afraid. On inquiring tlio cause, he tokl mo the medicine-folks were near ; I told him to strike away, and I stood at the door of the school. Some few stragglers of the medicine-party were hovering about, but they did not dare to interfere with us. When all were assembled, and tlie striking ceased, my adult pupils com- menced a great talk ; I had seen, as tliey came in, there was something serious on their minds. After a little time, a chief came and told me that the Indians were ' talking bad ' outside, by wliich I understood that the medicine-folks had been using more threats to stop us. However, I quickly stopped the consultation, and got them on at work ; on leaving school 1 came into contact with the same medicine- party wliich I met on going to school. I almost hesitated about proceeding, but the Lord did not let me halt. "The medicine-men were ashamed to meet mo, and so took a short turn. They then became very much scattered, some hung behind, the charm seemed broken, and all seemed lost. On nearing the Fort, I met one of the most important men in the medicine-business, a chief, and father to one of the little boys that are being initiated. I spoke to him. Ho stopped, and I then told him how angry God is to see sucli wickedness as ho and his party were carrying on ; and also how gi'ieved I was to see it. He spoke very kindly, and told me that if they did not make their medicine-men as they had always been used to do, then there would be none to stop ov frustrate the designs of those bad men who made people sick, and therefore deaths would be more numerous from the effects of the evil workings of such bad men. I told him if :hey put away their wicked ways, then God would take care of them. He did not say much more, except assuring r.ie it was the intention of all soon to do as I wished them, but at ])resent tlie medicine-jiarties must go on. I learnt shortly afterwaids, from the chief officer of the Fort, that this very man and another had just visited the Fort to tell him they ^1: ClIAP. XII. THREATS OF THE INDIANS. 325 would now bo content if I would stay school for a fortnight, and, after that, they would all come to be taught ; but if I did not comply they intended stop})ing me by force, for they had determined to shoot at my pupils as they came to the school. I had a long talk to two of the officers about the matter, giving them plainly to understand that I did not intend in the least degree to heed the threats of the Indians, but go on with my work I would, in spite of all. I told them that Satan had reigned long enough here ; it was high time his rule was disturbed (as it is). I went, of course, to school as usual this afternoon ; about 90 pupils were present. After we had done, a chief who was present began to address them, encouraging them to continue; after he hud done, I began to speak on the matter to them. I was afraid I should not be able to convey my feelings to them in their own tongue, yet, thanks be to God, I was enabled to do so. I'he ell'ect I desired, was produced: they all reassured me of their con- tinuing, come A\hat would. " After school, as I had '^jveral calls to make to see the sick, I went out, and found plenty of grateful heacts to acknowledge ray feeble endeavours for their good ; I was in ten houses. Everywhere I hear intimations of the struggle that is now going on. Oh ! that the Almighty arm would interpose, that this people may be delivered from the chains which have so long fettered them. " Dee. 20. — This day has been a great day hero. I luuo to thank heartily that all-seeing Father who has covered me and supported me to-day. The devil and wicked men lermied to overthrow me this dav, but the Lord would not have it so. I am still alive. "This morning the medicine-party who are carrying on their work near to the school, broke out with renewed fury, because, as they assert, the child of the head chief had just returned from above. The little boy that lights my lire came m great excitement to tell me that the head chief was ....:ri;i. ,1' !j 'nif •: i, ')k 1 9} I! J' \ 1; ! '! M III I II' i It i^ i !V 1 326 HOSTILE VISIT TO THE SCHOOL. Chap. XII. not willing for me to have school to-day, and was anxious to know if I intended going ; lie seemed gioatly amazed at my answer. On going to school, I observed a crowd of these wretched men in a liouse that I was approaching. When they turned to come out, they saw me coming, and imme- diately drew back until I had passed. As soon as I got into school, tlio wife of the head chief came to beg mo to give up school for a little time : she was certainly very modest in her manner and request, but altogether unsuccessful. I spoke to her a little, and then she said (what I know to be false) that it Avas not she nor her husband that desired to go on with the medicine-work, for they often cried to see the state of things, but it was the tribe that urged them to do what they were doing. Wlien she saw she could prevail nothing, not even so much as to prevent striking the steel, which they have a peculiar hatred for, she left me. I then went up the ladder and struck the steel myself, as I did not like to send a boy up ; very soon about 80 pupils were in the school, and we w« nt on as usual. "This afternoon, a boy ran to strike the steel, and not many seconds elapsed before I saw the head chief ajiproachiug, and a whole gang of medicine-men after him, dressed up in their usual charms. The chief looked very angry, and bade the boy cease : I waited at the door until he came up. His first effort was to rid the school of the few pupils that had just come in ; he shouted at the top of his voice, and bade them be off. I immediately accosted him, and demanded to know what he intended or expected to do ; his gang stood about the door, and I think seven came in. I saw their point : it was to intimidate me by their strength and frightful appearance, and I perceived the cliief, too, Avas somewhat under the influence of rum ; but the Lord enabled me to stand calm, and without the slightest fear to address them with far more fluency, in their tongue, than I could have imagined possible — to tell them of their sin faithfully — to Chap. XII. VIOLENCE OF TIIK CHIEF. 327 vindicate my conduct — to exhort tliem to leave their bad ways, and also to toll tliem tliey must not tliink to make me afraid. I told them that (»od was my master, and I must obey Him rather than them, and that tlie devil htis tauj^lit tlioir fatliers what they were practising, and it was bad ; but what I was tcacliing now was God's way, and it was good, and that all the Tsimsheeans knew. "Our meeting lasted for more than an hour. I saw a great many peo[)le at a distance looking anxiously at our proceedings, the school-door being open, and wo stood near it. Nearly all my pupils had lied in fear. The eliief expressed himself very passionately, now and tlien breaking out into furious language, and showing off his savage nature by his gestures. Sometimes I pacified him by what I said, for a little time ; but he soon broke out again with more violence. Towards tlie close of the scene, two of the confederates, vile- looking fellows, went and whispered something to him, upon which he got up from a seat he had just sat k(> ol' the (lilliciiltii'S in the way of attending seliool now, and so ollered me the use of his house for a seliool, whcro tlu! i'hihh-cn and others wotdd not he afrjiid to come. I rr'adily availed myself of his kindness, and I hope that good will aris(3 out of the arrangement. "Dec. 21. — I have had school to-day in tlie ehief's house. About 100 scholars attended. A medicine-i)art v from a dis- tant tribe has arrived to-day, and caused L.nat stir among liie parties here. In one house to-night, where I dropptMl in, I Inimd about fiftocn (piietly sitting over the fire, t^vo or three of whom were interesting the rest by g(jing oNcr the reading-lesson of the day, which they had written on a slate I had lent them. " Dec. 23.— School as usual in the chief's house, both yester- day and to-day. " I am told that the head chief is still doing, or rather say- ing, all he can to hinder my work. Yesterday, at a feast of the medicine-parties, he gave a speech full of bitter feeling towards us. I hear, too, he is tainiting the chief who luis lent me his house. How all this will end I cannot tell, but I leave it with God. " Dec. 21:. — At the close of school-work this morning I gave my audience an address on the coming Christian festival, which has hitherto only been distinguishable to the Indians as a time of riot and drunkenness among the whites. " While in school there was a frightful outburst of the medicine-parties, setting the whole of the camp round about in a kind of teiTor. A party were, with their naked pro- digy, on the beach when I went out of the school, but on seeing me they immediately ran into a house until I got past. " I hear that the chief of the medicine-party strangers who have arrived lately here has proposed to try the strength of inv medicine, which means he will trs how ■strong 1 eun talk, :,:^lli ;.ni(*i.| ^'! i %:. m / V /A IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I4£ I.I 1^ IIM 18 Photographic Sciences Corporation 1.25 1.4 11.6 6" — ► 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 (716) 873-4503 I mm 15 i I; t ^jjji .III' 330 CHllISTMAS-DAY. CUAP. XII. or whether I can resist his strong talk and his imaginary evil influence. " Dec 25 : Christmas-day. — Yesterday I told my scholars to bring their friends and relatives to school to-day, as I wanted to tell them something new. I found a strong muster when I arrived at the chief's house, and a long train of all ages followed me in. We numbered over 200 souls. I felt the occasion to be a very important one, and longed to turn it to some good account. We did not read as usual, but I tried to make them understand why we distinguished this day from others. After this I questioned the children a little, and then we sung two hymns, which we also translated. While the hymns were being sung, I felt I must try to do some- thing more, although the language seemed to defy me. I never experienced such an inward burnmg to speak before, and therefore I determined to try an extemporaneous address in Tsimsheean. The Lord helped me : a great stillness pre- vailed, and, I thiuk, a good deal of what I said was under- stood. I told them of om* condition, the pity and love of God, the death of the Son of God on our account, and the benefits arising to us therefrom. I then exhorted them to leave their sins, and pray to Jesus ; warning them of the consequences if they refused, and told them of the good which would follow to them on obedience. On hearing me enumerate the sins of which they are guilty, I saw some turn and look at each other with those significant looks which betokened their assent to what I said. I tried to impress upon them the certain ruin which awaited them, did they proceed in their present vices. Very remarkably, an illustration corroborating what I said was before their eyes. A poor woman was taken sick, not four yards from where I stood, and right before the eyes of my audience. She was groaniug under a frightful affliction, the effect of her vices. " Dec. 28. — School as usual in the chief's house ; over 150 ])upils on each occasion. One man came to-day to return Chap. XII. ^nary evil scholars to 3 1 wanted ister when >f all ages 1 felt the turn it to ; I tried to ! day from little, and d. While do some- ify me. I *ak before, us address Uness pre- vas under- ive of God, le benefits eave their quenees if uld follow the sins k at each ned their them the i in their roborating was taken jefore the frightful over 150 to return Chap. XII. VISIT TO A SICK INDIAN. .331 thanks to me for giving him a little medicine, which, he says, has been the means of his recovery from sickness. It is rather an interesting case to me, because this person is the first, so far as I know, who, being dangerously ill, has refused to call in the aid of the medicine-folks, from a conviction tliey could do him no good, but only told him lies. Having recovered witliout them, ho is making a great talk about it. '■^ Dec. 29. — After school to-night I went to take a little medicine to a sick man, and found in his house a group of Indians of the tribe wliich have lately sent a party of medi- ci lie-men here to show themselves off. I, therefore felt an increased desire to set forth the Gospel on this visit, that these poor creatures might go back and tell their people sometliing of the glad tidings they had heard. Their village is about 80 to 100 miles away from here, I think. For some time I could not begin ; however, I would not go away, but stood musing and praying, my heart burning, but full of mis- giving. At last an opportunity was afforded me, and I began, and, by God's blessing, I was e.iabled to set the Gospel clearly and fully before them — that is, as to the first and essential great truths of it. While I was speaking, one or two would make remarks as to the truth and reason- ableness of what I said. Several times one man exclaimed — ^ Alim niahhl ahm 7)ials?i!' (Good news! good news). And another, ^heu 1 had done, said, ' Shmhotr,'' which means ' It is true,' and it is equivalent, in their way of speak- ing, to ' Amen,' ' I believe.' They all seemed thankful for my visit, and I hope the Lord will bless it. I tried to enforce the duty of love and obedience to God, by alluding to the attachment and obedience they expected from theii' children. To this they agreed, and fully believed the Indians would not be long before they would be altogether changed." It will be seen from the above that Mr. Duncan's work had much increased : feeling that he could not cany it on single- handed, he wrote hom«3 requesting very earnestly that a coad- :---^1li 332 DEMAND FOR ANOTHER MISSIONARY. Chap. XII. i;'! li! :'3 jutor raij^lit bo sent to him. About tliis time a serious dilTiculty bepjan to cuibarrass liim, viz., what was to be done with the children wlio were being- taught, when they passed from his liands. It was evident to him, and to the Indians them- selves, that they and the well-disposed adults among them would be far too weak numerically to be able to carry out their new principles in their old camp. The necessity of transj)hinting them, therefore, was evident ; although how such a number could be removed against the wish, probably, of many of their parents and the tribe generally, was a problem most difficult of solution. In it, however, he was not without assistance from some of the Indians themselves. In his journal for June, 1851), he writes : " Had some talk with a chief, who entreated me to beg for another missionary, and to remove the well-disposed Indians and their children away to some good land about 30 miles from here, that they might thus escape the present scenes of wickedness." A few days later the same chief came again, knowing that Mr. Duncan was writing letters to Vic- toria, and again urged his request for another missionary, and for a separation to be made in the camp. He said, that the Indians were willing to give Mr. Duncan their children to teach and bring up as he wished, adding, however, that the grown people desired no change. With the approach of autumn and the renewal of the medicine-orgies among the Indians, Mr. Duncan's difficulties recurred. What progress he made, his own words will best describe : — " August 18, 1859. — This morning forty-three children and fourteen adults were at school. After the usual lessons, I gave them a short address, or rather tried to impress upon them the safety of God's people, and the insecurity of the wicked. The Lord enabled me to express myself with feeling earnest- ness, and disposed my hearers to attention and solemnity, llavhig a good deal of writing to do in the books which I ClIAP. XII. THE SCHOOL r.PtOKEN INTO. ooo OO'f write for my pupils for homo lossons, I annouiicod wo would have no school in the afternoon of to-day. After dinner a loud and unusual knock was given at the door. I opened it. It was a chief, bringing me the brolcen lock of tlie school, and the sad intelligence that Cushwaht (a notoriously bad man), being drunk, had with an ax(} broken my door open, entered the school, and smashed all the windows. "Jlie chief then entered into a passionate explanation of the cause of this deed, and assured me that Cushwaht stood alone in the mischief; not another Indian would have dared or thought of such a thing. " Very soon several other Indians came — some to bring me the utensils of the school, and others to tender their sympatliy. Thus it has pleased the Lord to permit us to have another check ; but I trust and pray He will make it ndminister good. This is the explanation. The Indian that did the mischief has a bad leg. He sent his wife this morning to beg of a little salve for it, but she was unsuccessful. refused to assist because of his bad conduct, he having, only a few days ago, struck a woman who lives in the I'ort with a sword, and wounded her severely, and for no cause. Being denied the salve, and under the influence of rum, lie went, Indian like, to revenge himself on what came readiest of the white man's property, and that happened to be the school. Here is the good providence of God in ordering that I and my scholars were not to be in the building when the wicked savage was to vent his rage upon it. Had we been assembled, I tremble to think what might have been the con- sequences. The chief who came to my house to bring me the lock, &c., entreated me not to go outside the Fort, as the enraged villain might fire upon me ; but I felt assured that the Lord would protect me while in the path of duty. On seeing me on the beach, several Indians came to speak with me, to tender their sympathy, and express their anger with the man. I remember an old man saying *the whole ;■ ..;» . r?rrr. i ,- , f,, , 1 ft ij Hf '■ w| It""" ilM 334 MUIIDERS AND IJIOTS. Chap. XII. II ; .1 •>; ; I . k ¥ camp was crying, and many guns were ready and waiting for the villain if he dared to appear.' I entreated them not to shed liis blood ; said that it was very wrong indeed what ha had done, but that I was inclined to pity and forgive him. One house I had to go to was the next but one to that occu- pied by CushA\'aht. On approaching it, many thought, pro- bably, I was going to see him. They looked very mucli alarmed, expecting, no doubt, that firing would ensue. But on seeing me enter the house where the sick person was, many followed me, among whom was the wife of the mischievous rascal. I never alluded to my own troubles or wrongs, but ai)plied myself to the case of the poor invalid, whose state was indeed alarming. " /September 15. — Some sad work has occurred in the camp this afternoon. A young man, an Indian, under the influence of drink, irritated one of the chiefs, who Mas also partly drunk. The chief immediately seized a pistol, and shot the brother of the man who had offended him. Then commoiiced a series of encounters, and two more were killed. The firing is going on, and quite close to the school-house. " Sept. 19. — Another very serious disturbance to-day. As I went to the school-house, to see about repairing it, I ob- served that some of the Indians of one tribe were having a rum-feast. On nearing the house of the man who broke the school-windows (Cushwaht), I saw that his house was the point of attraction, and, from what I heard, concluded that a good many were already drunk within. I had nothing but civility shown me, both in going and returning, although I passed some that were drunk. I had only just got back to the Fort, when a quarrel took place in Cushwaht's house, and Cushwaht himself, as usual, the cause of it. It was not long before firing ensued. Two women have been killed, one of them Cushwaht's sister, and Cushwaht has been shot in the hand. These murders and riots are all tending very powerfully to awaken the minds of those who have been Chap. XII. Chap. XII. SCHOOL RECOMMEXCED. 335 under instruction, and to wean them more and more from tin's place of darkness. I find many flook around mo now to speak of their trouble, and they listen with much more att(Mi- tion and seriousness to the Gospel message. I have been for some time desiring to speak to the cannibal chief. To-day the oi^portunity was afforded me, and I had some talk with him. This man heads the most degrading superstitit)n this people have got ; but ho is a young man, and has a noble look. It will be a hard struggle if he ever sets himself to escape from the meshes of that horrid custom which he lias taken upon himself to perpetuate ; but I hope and pray God may give him light and strength for the conflict, and bring him, clothed and in his right mind, to the feet of Jesus, lie met my proposals very kindly, and promised to come under my instruction when he returns from a place whither he is going to purchase food. " Sept. 27. — By the good pleasure of our Heavenly Father we began school again to-day. About 50 children and 10 adults attended. The tide was so high that many had to come in canoes. It rained, too, all the day. I saw some of my little scholars, washed and with their best clothes on, waiting for me outside the Fort, hours before the time ap- pointed for opening school, although it rained. " Sept. 28. — I put Bibles into the hands of my first class to-day. AVhat a blessed event, indeed, when it is remem- bered that the entrance of God's Word givetli light ! A\'e commenced with St. Matthew's Gospel. " October ^th : Lord's-day. — Only between 40 and 50 souls present at school this morning. Many have gone away during last week to a place where they usually purchase large quantities of provisions. I was enabled, by the blessing of God, to introduce a happy change in our usual Sunday course. I handed ten of my pupils Bibles, and they read out simultaneously, several times over, the passage (Psalm cxlv. * i ■ .t |2'1 ! § l\li til illf 111 i 1 ^|-i i il; 330 A DKATII-BED SCIENE. CnAi'. XII. 18-20) from which I adcb-osscd tliom. Wo also translated it, clause l)y clauso, sovcrul times over. " Oct, 10. — A very solemn event has taken plaee Ihis even- inf^. 1 uas informed, on cominf^ out of the school this after- noon, that a younf^ man, who has l)eeji a long time suffering- in consumption (brought on by a seven; cold), and Avhom 1 have visited several times, was dying ; so, after a little re- flection, some misgiving, and prayer, I started off to see him. I fomid him, as his wife had said, dying. Over 20 persons were about him : some were crying, and two, I am sorry to say, were partly intoxicated. I looked on for some time in silent sorrow. AVh(»n I wished to speak, silence immediately ensued. I rebuked the noise and tunnilt, and directed the dying man to fix his heart on the Saviour Jesus, to forget the things about him, and spend his little remaining time in praying in his heart to God to save him. His reply was, • 0, yes, Sir ! (), yes, Sir !' and for some moments he would close his eyes, and seem absorbed in pi-ayer. On one occa- sion he spoke of his heart being happy or resigned. I couhl not make out the exact expression, as there was some talk- ing at the time, and the remark was in Tsimsheean. " He begged me, with much earnestness, to continue to teach his little girl. He wanted her to be good. This little girl is about seven years old ; her name is Cathl. She has been very regular at school since I commenced, and has made nice progress. "Much to my comfort, a young woman sat by his side who has been one of my most regular pupils. She is in the first class, and can read portions of the Bible. Her intelli- gence is remarkable, and I have observed her to be always very serious when listening to religious instruction. Thus, here was one sitting close to the dying man who could tell him, much more accurately than I, the few directions I desired to utter. What remarkable providence it seemed to ''•». ( itAP. Xn. TKACHAIUJIN'ESS OF TTIF. INDIANS. Ql>"7 O.) / \\\r,l With tears in licr cyos slio bounded him to give Ids lioiut to God iind to pniy to Iliin. I h)ii,i;ed to pniy with liiin, and watched anxiously a long time for tlio oi»i>ortnj»ity. Tho oi)poi-tunity came, and the strength came with it. I knelt down by liis side. All was hushed, and 1 prayed fi'om a lull heart to the Lord our (iud to have mercy upon the poor soul about to come into IJi.s ]»resence, lor the sake of Mis dear Son Jesus. I feed sure that the Lord lunird my [»rayer, and I can indulge a hope for this [xjor man's salva- tion. The whole of the circumstances seemed onlered of (h)d for my commencing this solemn and important duty oi' [»rayer with dying Indians. Li the case of this poor man, I can say I have felt my heart exceedingly rejoiced more than once, when I have left him, for what 1 had been permitted to see and hear. I know ho understood the main and leadin • > o I'l'I'II/S J()['J!\AL CflAI-. XII. wJiii'li was [)ra,ssa<>'('s from tlic Jmiriial of Slioo- (juanalils/' written after ten muntlis of occasioiuil instruction l>y 3Ir. Duncan : — ■ " Tuesdaij, April 4, 1800. — If \vill die my fatlu^r, thou will very ]»oor my heart 4 my bi'other all /v7!). — I'Ica.se, sir, I want to speak to you. I wish I had some powder for my gun. All done shot : all done for me. What foi* you want to shoot ducks? Because it is very sweet. Please, sir, ^\r. Duncan, will you give me a little l)ov,der and little shot? If you will give me any powder, then I will be very happy. If I get some ducks, then I will give 31 r. , Perhaps no Avant ducks, Mr. . " Ajn'il 10. — I could not sleep last night. I must work hard last night. I could not bo lazy last m'ght. No good lazv — Aery bad. Wo must learn to make all thinc:s. When we understand reading and writing, then it will veiy easy. Perhaps two years then we understand. If we no understand to read and to write, then he will very angry, Mr. Duncan. If we understand about good peo})le, then we will very hapi)y. April 27 : School, Fort Simpson. — 8hooquanalits not two hearts — no always one my lieart. Some boys always two hearts. Only one Shooquanaht's — not two heart, no. If I steal any thing, then God will see. Inid people no {.'are about Son of God. \Vhen will come troubled hearts, foolish people. Then he will very much cry. A^■ hat good cry ? Nothing. No care about our Saviour, fdways forget. By and by will under- stand about the Son of God. April 29. — How many ducks you get yesterday ? 5 ducks I shoot yesterdav. Did vou see many ducks yesterday i* < MAI'. Xll. i'i:iMi;s .loriiXAL. '{•?'» t >»)i ' Vcs, very many; not far away, hut nnav. To on(^ man I '/\\i' on(> (Inck vostcvd.iv, and one duck 1 <>at V(\st('rdav. Tho UiMMc ol'tliJit man is Nalis-lnkolik. Jlo want to wm-U for yon. If it rain to-morrow, thou wo caimot <^o to Sohassali. If it do not rain to-morrow, then we ;^'o to Sohassali. "f^th Mil/, I Slid. — Tlio l.rothor of S<'l»assali is not ity me when you go way Victoria, sir. \\ ho take care me, sir, when you go way ? who will give the soap f(n' me, sir ? who will give the tobacco for me when you go way Victoria, sir? who will give the medicine for me, sir, when you go way Victoria, sir ? No, not any will pity me when you go way, sir. Good will speak, sir, Mr. ]\Ioifat will l>ity me when you go way Victoria, sir. 'Ihen will, [)lease, ^ir, jMr. Duncan, will you give me a little medicine and Httlo soaj) ? — not now, sir ; no, when you will go way Vic- tetria, sir. Then good will pity me. "■May 17, 180(-).- -I do not understand some i)rayers — only few prayers 1 understand, Jiot all, I understand, no. I wLsh ;/- 2 r "S^^ ^^-A \\ '\ ':*\ ^A •ftl(^ 1*^1.1 •■.-r I ,'| 'jf!^^ * M nil) iTPir/s joui{Ny\r.. (HAP. XH. to iinut perhaps of all the J>isliop's cares ai'd difficulties none pressed more hardly upon him than the (piestion what to do with and for the Indians. The Songhies, near Victoria, were still living the most debased lives imaginable, while the many Indians who visited Victoria from the North — and their number increased yearly — could scarcely fail to imbibe their habits. Under these circumstances, it was but too clear that 3[r. Duncan's work, far away among the Tsimsheeans at Fort Simpson, was likely to be counteracted by the bad lessons which his former pupils would learn upon their visits to the South. In the hope, therefore, of providing a remedy for this state of things, j\Ir. Duncan was induced to go to Victoria to consult with the T-i:* Bf •'•,rM ■ H' i.iz (ifi V. i k'' :i;i ^' ( r J, r 344 A COADJUTOR FOR MR. DUNCAN. Chap. XTT. Governor and Hisliop as to the stops that slionld bo taken for the Indians' safety. Mr. Dnneau remained at Vietoria during the summer, organisin2j the phins deeided upon, and continuing his minis- trations among such of his ohl friends, the Tsimslieean Indians, who liappened to he there. By tliem and the Indians generally the most implicit confidence was placed in his good faith and motives. It was very strange to notice among these — the fiercest of the Coast-trihes — the childlike affection which they displayed towards him, and the thorough trust they expressed in his integrity. Speaking of them himself, he says: "My duties have kept me from noon till night among the Indians. They so appreciate my exertions for their temporal welfare, that many have come to receiv«! religious instruction who would otherwise have stayed away. The Indians are continually coming to me with their troubles, and seem very grateful for my assistance. I also succeeded in getting several into good places as servants." In June, when the G'overnor returned from British Columbia, he at once acceded to the plans submitted to him for the benefit of the Indian population, and took the necessary ste[)s to carry them into action. At a public meeting 00/. was collected for the erection of a school-house. 'I'lio Governor himself made this sum up to 100?., and the building was immediately commenced. On the 8th August j\Ir. Tugwell, who had been sent by the Church Missionary Society to join j\[r. Duncan, arrived, and it was determined that they should both go at once to Fort Simpson in order that j\Ir. Duncan might introduce his companion to his duties there, and then return to Victoria for the winter to superintend the new schools. They accord- ingly left Victoria on the 13th, and reached Simpson on the 21st August. While there, to his great delight, news reached him that the Rev. A. C. Garret and Mr. IMallandaine had volun- teered to take charge of the Indian schools at Victoria, and Chap. XII. 8C1I00T, EXAMINATION. 34.') that his return for thnt purpose was iK)t therefore neeessary. These gentletnen at once assumed tlieii* self-imposed duti(>s, and ill a short time bronprlit the schools into a hil it - ■. It i it ' " ^ ii 1 \''>fe';:r ill r{5o HABITS OF THE WTTTTE TOrULATTON. Chap. XI f. work with regard to money, schools, i^c, 1 liavo said nothing of tlio disheartening moral condition of tlio mass of tli(i civili^sed population of tlicse colonics. By far the larger portion of the colonists are miners, mIio, tliongh as yet their conduct since they arrived in liritish territory has been vei-y }»raisewortliy, liad previously been living for years in Cali- fornia, where the "Almighty Dollar" is the only ohj«'ct of worship. A[»art I'roni this, the veiy nature of a miner's life te" ^s to ungodliness : he is perpi'tually roving about, in the n ;iing rich, at sunset poor; to-day a gentleman — in the American sense of the term — to-morrow a labourer. I'or a few years some perhaps work with the notion of return- ing as rich men to their native land ; but during tliat time the many fluctuations of the struggle, and the hard, wild life they lead, so unfit them for domestic existence, that, if they are Ibrtunate enough to have made money and leave tlie counti-y, tliey probably spend it all in the first large town they come to ; or, reaching home, tire of it in a few months, and return to the life which has become second nature to them. These miners, as I have before said, are by no means always un- educated ; many men of got)d i)arc^ntage and educatiiin are to be found among them, and this very fact renders the inculca- tion of religion more difficult than it otherwise would be. I am not, of course, speaking of those who, begimiing as poor men, steadily work their way to competence or wealth, bene- liting themselves, those around them, and the country of their adoption, but of those who, so soon as they have made two or three thousand dollars, instead of eidarging their works, or laying the money by, rush to San Francisco, spend it like fools, and return beggared. In the few books that have been written about these colonies, various remarkf. 'lave been made on the society of Victoria, It would ill become me to pass over without a word that society in which I have spent four as happy years as anv of mv life, from which I have alwavs met with the Chap. XII. CONDITION OF THE NEGIJOES. Mf.l pfreatcst kindness, and in wliich it will ^ivc mv real j»l(iisui<> a;j;ain to mix it* fato should send me to Victoria. That my opinion is shared hy most of the members of my profession, any impartial witness of tlie social proceedings of the last live years will allow ; and if most of the ladies of Victoria have not joined that profession, matrimonially at least, it has hecn from no want of invitation on the part of its members. 1 must not omit to mention the African Negntes, several hundreds of whom left California when British Columbia sprung into life. It is well known to all who have lived among Northern Americans that they treat free negroes infinitely worse than an Englishman would treat a dog. In California neither coloured men nor Chinese arc allowed the benefit of the laws, such as they arc, and their evidence is not taken in the courts, so that a black man may be murdered in the midst of a hundred other blacks, and if there is no white man to impeach the murdei'er, redress cannot be obtained. This feeling was not lessen(;d in the hearts of the Americans at Victoria when they found this hated race, that they had illused in every way, enjoying precisely the same privileges as themselves. The consequence was that on one occasion there was a pitched battle in the theatre between blacks and whites, in which, I believe, the former came off victorious. Then the whites objected to the blacks being allowed to go to the same church with them, and actually appealed to the Bishop to prevent it. The ]iishop was firm in his refusal to do anything of the kind, but I believe many stayed away from church in consequence. One of the dis- senting ministers from Canada was obliged t<^ h.-ave the country for giving the same refusal. The whites all deserted his church and went to another who was anti-black, and the negroes were unable to support their champion. As a rule these free negroes are a very quiet people, a little given perhaps to over familiarity when any opening for it is afforded, very fond of dignity, always styling each other Mr., X. Pffi ■M.,i/1 ■ ill rf ! y.vi IMfKSKXT STATK OF THE MISSION'. {'map. XII. and a(lili(rt(Ml to un imposin;^ costunie, in tho wjiy of black coats, gold stud.s and watch-chains, &c. ; but thoy aro a lar moro Htoady, sober and thrifty sot than tho whites by whom they arc so much despised. Tho Chinese aro also very quiet and harndess. They make fair cooks and servants, and where they take to digging arc generally content to work claims discardisd by the regular miners; they do not do much good to the colony, however, as they eat little and driidv less, and spend little or no money in tho country. I have before said that ono ov two churches have been built since tho IJishop's arrival. More are, I luiderstand, biung erected, and the mission has spread by this time as far as Cariboo, which it was the Lishop's intention to visit this summer. For any further particulars, liowever, 1 refer the reader to the Iteport of tho Columbia Mission, where all tho details connected with this most important work will bo found recorded. ' I ■■) s mi IIAP. XII. ciiAP. xiri. HKSUUUCKS or THE COL'NTHY. 353 of bUick y aro a liitos by L They take to luded l»y 10 colony, 1 little or lavc beoii icliTfjtaiul, iuio as far visit this refer tlio where all work will CllAPTEU XIII. Itontos to British Columbia — Af^ricnltiiral lie aonrccs of British C'ohmihift and Vancouver Ifilaml — Natural llisty tlic Hudson J>ay |icoj)lo, wliicli ovon this consideration coidd not justify ; bnt 1 do maintain tlmt a liandful of white nn-n, hnii:ed Ly the rnlos which a[tply to a more civilised static ol' oxistenco. One of the main charges against the olllcers of the Hudson Day Company in what was then New Caledonia is, that while their lease of the conntry specified that ofl'ences aliove a certain degree should be tried by the Courts ol' t^anada, they, instead of sending criminals there, executed a species oi retaliatory justice themselves. lUit it was simply ridiculous to expect any such slow and awkwiird machineiy for the repression or punishment of crime to be used. As it was, the Com])any, under that instinct of self-jtresenation I have before put forward in their defence, appoint<3d the best men they had to the charge of tlieir posts, and left them to hold their own and maintain law and order among the Indians as best tliev could. No one who has travelled much amonjjr the natives of British Columbia can fail to be convinced that one result of the Company's rule has been that the white man is respected by them everywhere. Even the missionaries — who complain of the little that has been done during these many years for the spiritual welfare of the Indian tribes — must admit that but for tlieir familiarity with the traders, and the opinion they have thereby gained of the honesty and justice of the' Englishman generally, their reception would be very different to what it now is. Again ; the abuse which has been shovt'ered upon the long and undisturbed monopoly of the trade of these regions enjoyed by the Hudson Bay Company would have been more deserved had their possession of them been valued or envied by others. As it was, the country was unheeded by I.M'. Xlll. CUAP. XIII. IXri.l'KNTE OF TMK (OMI'AXY. n:.:. Tiirnncnt il l>y tlic DU COIlUl lite men, own 11 il^', lany botli istico, be 'd stiitc. of olTicors of Caledonia it oflVncc?* Courts oi' }Xceuto(l a vas simply inuchiuory sed. As it soiTation I d the best ft tlioni to he Indians iicli among ineod that the white nissionaries uring these tin tribes — le traders, lonesty and )tion would on the long Bso regions have been n valued or iiheeded by (•mi;;nints, ut'gltM'tcd by tlif ( Jovciiinicut, and bnt Ibr tin* Company's t(>nun> of it, might iiav(! i'alirn into the hands (tf liussia, France, the I'nil 1 States, or any otiier nation liiat carrd to takc^ it. The time has undoubtedly «'oni«' win ii tbcir pretensions to its longer possessittn shoiiM be rightiv iinlu'edcd. IJut \ think it should have been re.sumcd I , the Knglisli (lovcnnnent witii thanks for tin* Company's eare of it, rather than with vaguo (hstrust and suspicion of their past oc('nj)ation. I for on<; feel convinced that I shouhl liave Ibnnd it imp" si1)]c to travel about Dritish Columbia with the case and frec^dom from danger which I felt, but Ibr the inlluence of the Hudson Hay C(an])any exerted in my favour, 'i'lu^ name of 3Ir. l>oiiglas. as I have more than once said, j)roved to be a talisman, wherever it was mentioned, that secured me respect and help. The reports of Cajitain I'alliser show idso that the success of his throe years' exploration in the IJocky Mountains was owing, in no .small dcgr(.'(\ t<; the inlhicnce and assistance r(.>nderod him by the Company. The following extract from one of his •desjiatches will, 1 think, .serve to illustrate this sntliciently. One of a deputation of Indians who waited upon him, an old chief, spoke thus: — " 1 cU) not ask for presents, although 1 am poor and my lieople are hungry. • But I know that you have come stiaiglit from the great coimtry, and we know that no man from that country ever came to us and lied. I want you to declare to us truthfully what the great Qn(?en of your country intends to do to us when she takes the country from the J^'ur Company's people. All around I see the smoke of the white men to arise. The Lougknives (Americans) are trading with our neighbours for their land, and they are cheating and deceiving them." Who but the officers find men of this much-abused C'ora- pany could have inspired this spokesman of the Indian ])eo})l(; 2 A 2 ,\ i hf .1 ' 'f*' if 356 ROUTES TO BIMTISU COLUMBIA. Chap. XIIT. with tlio trust in the word of an Englishman which is hero oxpre?so(l ? Again ; any one who knows tlie condition of tlio Indians in Ihitisli Columbia, and will take the trouble to compare it with that of the tribes in American territory, must come to the conclusion that some salutary influences — wautinjjr there — have been at work among them. Scarcely a pa[)er reaches Victoria fnmi Oregon or Washington states that does not contain an account of some brutal murder of Mhites by the Indians, or some retaliatory deed of blood by the trooi)s of the United States. So confirmed, indeed, has their enmity become, that what is little shoi't of a policy of extermination is being pursued towards the Aborigines. But in British Columbia troops have not once been called upon to oppose the Indians ; and men of every class, from the Bishop on his visitation to the friendless miner, travel among them in coniidenro and unmolested. While, therefore, quite prepared to admit that in their government of the country the Hudson Bay Company ha\e been guilty of sins both of commission and omission, I cannot, in common justice, forbear from stating the good they have actually accomplished in British Columbia. With respect to the routes to British Columbia, there are at present five open : — 1st. By the Eoyal West India mail-steamers to Aspinwall, across the Isthmus of Panama, and thence by American packets to San Francisco and Victoria. 2nd. By the Cunard steamers to New York, and thence by American steamer to Aspinwall ; the rest of this route being by the same conveyance as the last. 3rd. Round Cape Horn, or through Magellan Straits, and thence direct to Victoria by the same ship all the way. 4th. Across the American continent, from Lake Superior or St. Paul's to Red River, and thence over the Rocky (HAP. X[1I. ROUTER TO BriTISII COLUMBIA. 357 j\Ionntjiiiis. Or, perliaps, it would be bettor to say across the continent in IJiitish territory, as there are several ways by which this may be done. And — 5tli. Across the continent in American territory to Cali- Ibvnia, and thence by steamer to Victoria ; or by land to I'ortland, in Oregon, and from there by steamer to Victoria. By the first of these routes the total expense of the journey may be estimated at 00?. for first class, proportionately less of course for second and tliird ; the time oocu[)ied, if there are no delays on the way, being under six weeks. Adopting this route, the traveller may embark at Southampton on the 1st or lOth of any month, and proceed direct to St. Thomas, a passage of 12 or 14 days. At St. Tliomas he takes an intercolonial steamer, and in four to six days reaches Aspin- wall, the port on this side of the Isthmus of Panama. Crossing the Istlimus by rail, in S| hours Panama is reached. Here the great drawback to this route is often experienced ill the fact that there is no certainty of finding a Pacific sti'amer ready to sail, and that very often the traveller has to stop at Panama a week or ten days before one starts. This delay, of course, adds considerably to tlie expense of the journey, to say nothing of Panama being a most unliealthy place to stay in. Arrangements, however, are said to be making to remedy this inconvenience. The passage to San Francisco occupies 14 or 15 days, and on the way the steamer calls at Acapulco for coal. Arrived at San Francisco a further delay takes place, and it is some- times a week or ten days before the steamer for Victoria 1 aves. Some arrangement has, I believe, lately been entered into, however, which has made the line between San Francisco and Victoria more regular. By the second route the latter half of the journey is the same as the first, the dilYerence being that the traveller starts b)^ the Cunard steamer from Liverpool for New York. At New York tlie traveller may have to stay a few days, .ji«i l?i i#*i'v si i^fl" I' 358 IIOUTES TO BRITISH COLUMBIA. Chap. XUI. '■'■■Sij. '.-' 'm m "£*' if t ' y'i but this is better than waiting at Panama, and then he goes to Aspinwall in a regular line of American packets : the great advantage of this line being that it is connected with the Pacific Mail Company's steamers to San Francisco, and therefore there is no chance of being — unless, indeed, the Atlantic packet brings more passengers than the Pacific one can carry away — kept eight or ten days on the Isthmus. I'ho third route is, by the old way, round Cape Horn, or through the Straits of ]\Iagellan. The drawback to this is the length of the sea-voyage, which may bo said to average five months, although it has been done in four. The Hudson Bay barque, 'Princess lloyal,' has for years made a yearly trip out and home, leaving England in the autumn, reaching Victoria in January or February, and returning home again by the end of June. She still bears the palm for quick passages. Captain Trivett, who has com- manded her for years, says his great object always is to get out well to westward after passing Cape Horn, not caring if he have to go somewhat to southward in doing so, by which he finds he gains greatly on those who fear getting too far westward, and hug the coast rather than stretch far out. His quickest passages have been 118 days out and 110 days home ; his average of five i)assages out 133 days. This route is by far the cheapest yet open, and indeed may be said to be the only one within the reach of the poorer class of emigrants. The cost varies considerably, but will get cheaper as passengers become more numerous. The Hudson Bay Company's charge has always been 70?. for first class and iiOl. for second class. Their charges for freight also have always been high also, but vessels are constantly advertised to sail by first-rate firms ; and a line of clipper ships of 1200 tons is announced to carry passengers at niore moderate rates. The fourth way lies across our own part of the continent. This route must be for some time virtually impassable. Th«^ i'ate of those emigrants who, deluded by the misrepresenta- Chap. XIII. IIOUTES TO BniTISII COLUMBIA. 359 tions of tlio bubble British Columbian Overland Transit Com- j)any, started to make a supposed easy journey from St. Paul's across the Rocky jMountains, must still be fresh in the recol- lection of my readers. The inducements held out by the so- called Company, calculated as they undoubtedly were to deceive the public generally, could impose upon no one who had any practical experience of the country. For instance, one of their statements was, that above 1000 carts travelled annually along the line they proposed to follow. The impres- sion conveyed by this is that these carts crossed the Rocky ]\J.ountain8 into British Columbia by the route proposed to be taken by the Company ; whereas the truth is, that they simply trade to the Red River and the KSaskatchewan country, and no further. That a waggon-road will some day be carried over the passes of the Rocky Mountains that lie beyond the Red River settlement, and between that point and British Columbia, I have no doubt. It may be, indeed, that before very long the whistle of the locomotive will be heard among them. But that as yet they are inii)assable for waggons, and that they present great, and at times almost insurmountable, difficulty to all save the experienced unin- cumbered traveller, tlie following quotations from the reports of Captains Palliser and Blakiston and J3r. Hector will, I think, be found to contain conclusive proof. It will assist the reader in forming a judgment upon this matter if I tirst give, from the report of Captain Blakiston, an account of the passes of the Rocky jMountains by which British Columbia may be reached. " In anticipation," writes Captain Blakiston, " of the establishment of a continuous route through British North America, it is proper here to refer to the passes of the Rocky IMountains north of latitude 49'', or, in other words, in British territory. There are many points at which the chain of these mountains can be traversed ; but omitting for the present that known as ' reel's River Pass,' within the Arctic circle, and that I'rom Fraser Lake to Pelly i i'" »■ i '* i 30*0 PASSES OF TPIE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. Ciiai'. XIII. Banks, at the head-waters of the Youkon in latitude 62°, as well as one from Dease's House to Stickeen, and others only known to the hardy fur-traders of the far north, we come to three : one of which crosses from the Findlay branch of the Peace River to Cabine Eiver, the northern boundary of the province of Columbia ; while the other two, at the very head- waters of Peace Kiver, in latitude 55° north, connect with Fraser River at its most northern bend, one of wliich was described, as long ago as 1793, by that intrepid traveller. Sir Alexander Mackenzie. The connection with these being, however, by water, and rather far north on the east side, I shall pass on to enumerate the known passes more to the southward, and wliich may be called the passes to British Columbia. In commencing with the North, they stand thus : — Latitude, o ( " 1. Cowdung Lake Portage, or Leather Pass .. .. 54 ON. 2. P>oat Encampment on original Alliabasca portage 53 3. Howse's Pass 51 45 4. Kicking-Horse Pass .. 51 25 5. Vermilion Pass 51 10 G. Kananaskis, or Emigrant Pass 50 40 7. Crow's-nest Pass 49 40 8. Kootonay Pass 49 25 *• The first of these connects the head-waters of Athabasca River with the great fork of the Fraser, and has never been used except as a portage between these two rivers. " 2. The second is that wliich, until the last few years, was used regularly by the Hudson Bay Company for the convey- ance of a few fm's, as well as despatches and servants, from the east side to the Pacific, by the way of the Columbia River, and which, from the ' Boat Encampment,' is navigable for small craft ; but this, hke the first, has not been used in connection with any land-route on the west side. •' 3. The third was probably first used by either Thompson or Howse (author of the Croe grammar), who, following up :hai'. XIII. le 62°, as hers only ) come to ch of the iiy of the eiy head- iiect with ^hich was ?^eller, Sir 30 being, ,st side, I re to the British ey stand ;itudi'. ON. 45 25 10 40 40 25 Lthabasca 3ver been rears, was Q convey- mts, from Columbia navigable in used in -liompson owing up CuAP. XIII. PASSES OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. 301 the noilli branch of the ^NisKatcliewan, crossed the watershed of the mountains to the north fork of the Columbia, and tlience to its source, the Columbia Lakes, where, striking the Kootonay Eiver, he followed it down to the south of 49'-" north. " 4. The * Kicking-Horse Pass,' so named by Dr. Hector, crosses the watershed from near the head-waters of the Low Kiver to those of the Kootonay, and may be readied by following up either the north or south branches of the Sas- katchewan by land. " 5. While another (see Parliamentary I'upers, June 1839), the ' Vermilion Pass,' likewise traversed and laid down by I )r. Hector during the summer of 1858, occurs also on Dow liivor so near the last-named one, that it is unfortunate that the western edge of the mountains was not reached, as it would then have proved whether these passes can be of value in connection with a continuous route across the country.* " 6. The next pass which enters the mountains in common with the fifth on Bow liiver, has been named the ' Kananaslcis Pass ' (see Parliamentary Papers, June 1859), and was laid down by latitude and longitude observations during the summer of 1858 by Captain Palliser. This also leads to the Kootonay liiver, passing near the Columbia Lakes. It is generally supposed that this pass was only discovered last year, but a description of it is to be found in ' An Overland Journey Hound the AVorld,' by Sir George Simpson, who, together with a party of emigrants, 50 in number, under the late Mr. James Sinclair, passed through, but not with carts, as had. been stated,! to the lower part of the Columbia in 1841, besides which it has been used by otlier travellers. If we are to consider its western extremity to the soutJi of the Columbia Lakes, it is a long and indirect route, but as * See imst, extract from Dr. Hector's report of tliis. t See EviJeiKC liefure the tSelcvt (.'uiiiiiiilti(s ' Iludciou Uuy Quctitioa.' «llr -^ ,**.?«' r\: ''• # 1/ . IP ill I ' ,-*■■ ' il 302 PASSES OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. Chap. XI 1 1. M yet it has only been used for followiii};^ tlio valley of the Kootonay, iintl thence into American territory. In the event of the country west of the Columbia Lakes proving suitable for a land-road, this, as well as the previous three, would prove available for crossing from the Saskatchewan north of latitude 51". "For 100 geographical miles of the mountains south of Bow lliver no pass is at dresent known to exist until we come to the IMocowans, or Belly Biver, a tributary of the Saskatchewan, on the branches of which four passes enter the mountains — the * Crow-nest,' the ' Kootonay,' the ' Boun- dary,' and the ' Flathead.' " 7. Of the first of these, we know only that its eastern entrance is on the river of the same name, and that it emerges in the vicinity of the Steeples, or Mount Deception, while neither of the two last are entirely in British territory — hence the name of ' Boundary Pass ' for that which has its culminating point north of 49°. "8. The 'Kootonay Pass,' is the most southern, and, of those yet known, by far the shortest in British territory. "These passes, of which the altitudes are known, do not differ greatly ; and I refrain from commenting on their relative merits, because before any particular one can he selected for the construction of a road, the easiest land- route from Hope and the western bend of the Fraser Eiver should be ascertainod, which, considering the distance, would bo no very great undertaking. In conclusion, I would only remark, that at present no jjass in British territory is prac- ticable for wheeled-carriages ." * It should be remembered that Captahi Blakiston wrote this before an overland route was thought of. But he has since told me, that during his explorations he came upon * ' Blue IJ.Juk,' Jiiiio, I8»;(t, [>. C,\. ^ i. !'^^' Chap. XIII. Chap. XIII. PASSES OF THK ROCKY MOUNTAINS. 303 its eastern the remains of tlie wofjj^ons of Mr. Sinclair's party upon this side of the nionntaiiis, tlic idea of transporting them farther liaving been abandoned at that spot. ]^r. Hector, the geologist accompanying Captain Palliser's cx[)edition, upon reaching the Rocky ^Fountain house, in tlie most northerly of the passes enumerated above, writes of it thus : " The mountain-house is at a distance of not less than 100 miles from the main chain of the Rocky ]\Iountains, which are nevertheless distinctly seen from it as a chain of snow-clad peaks. The principal chain is, however, screened by a nearer range, distant about 45 miles I made an attempt to reach this near range, but failed in forcing a road through the dense pine-tvood with tvhich the whole countrg is covered." * Of the Kananaskis Pass, the sixth of the above list, Captain L*alliser writes thus : " On the 18tli of August 1 started to seek for the new pass across the Rocky Mountains, proceed- ing up the north side of the Saskatchewan or Bow River, passing the mouth of the Kananaskis River ; five miles higher up we crossed the Bow River, and entered a ravine. We fell upon Kananaskis River, and travelled up in a south- westerly direction, and the following day reached the Kana- naskis Prairie, known to the Indians as the place ' where Kananaskis was stunned but not killed.' On the 21st wo passed two lakes about two miles long and one wide. We continued our course, winding through this gorge in the mountains among cliffs of a tremendous height, yet our on- ward progress was not impeded by obstacles of any conse- quence ; the only difficulty we experienced was occasioned by quantities of fallen timber caused by fires On the 22nd August we reached the height of land between the waters of Kananaskis liiver and a new river, a tributary of the Kootonay River. Our height above Bow Fort was now *jt * Letkr to Ciii)taiii Piilliaur, Juiii', 8, 1858 ; ' Hluo liook,' p. 2U. vm PASSES OF THE HOC'KY MOUNTAINS. Chap. XIII. Jif Ill ■ : /■ 1885 fc'ot, or 5985 foet al)OVo tho sea. Next morning we comnionc'od our doscont, and for tbo first time were obliged to f^<'t oft' and walk, hading our horses down a precipitous slope of S){\{) feet over loose angular fragments of rock. This portion of our route continued for several days through dense masses of fallen timber, destroyed by fire, where our progress was very slow — not owing to any dinicully of the mountains, but on account of the fallen timber, which we had first to climb over and then to chop through to enable our horses to step or jump over it. We continued at this work from dnybroik till night, and even by moonlight, and reached the Columliia Portage on tlie 27th of August. " On September the 6th I started to recross these moun- tains by the Kootonay Pass (the eighth ui)on the above list). This is frecpiently used, but not the general pass of tlu^ Ivootonay Indians, who have a preferable one in American territory. " On the 7th of September wo passed the height of land — a formidable ascent, where we had to walk and lead the horses for two hours. This is the height of land which constitutes the watershed. We encamped for the night in a small prairie after making a considerable descent. " On the 8th of September our course continued through woods and sivamps, for al)Out 15 miles, till we reached another ascent. This was also a severe ascent, though not so for- midable as that of the day previous ; we reached its summit about four o'clock through a severe snow-storm (this in Sep- tember), the snow falling so fast as to make me very appre- hensive of losing the track. We descended that evening, and camped on the eastern side, and next day arrived at the eastern extremity of tho pass. I regret that I cannot give the altitudes of this pass, as our barometer was broken by one of the horses. It is, however, far from being so favour- able as the more northern, by which I entcj'ed on J\iiminaskis liiver, which has but one obstacle, in tho height of land, to CirAP. XIII. PASSES OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. 305 overcome, and where the whole line is free from swamps and marshes." * Dr. Hector, accompanying the same expedition, in speak- inf]r of the Vermilion Pass (the fifth npon the list), says of it: "On the 20th I crossed IJow River without swinimiii following extract from the Report of Captain Palliser to the Secretary of State for the Colonies, in 1859 : — * T.L'ttcr to Captain Palliser, Juno 8, 1858 ; ' Blue Book,' p. 3.^. t Lutttr of Dr. Hector, p. i^S. m ;.:^-:; i AM ~ ft ■■ i-r-H ■ jt-' .30(5 CAW. I'AI.IJSFJrf^ REPOiri'. CiiAr. XIII. *' 111 answer to tlio tliird (juory coiituinod in your Lortl- sliip's lottcr, viz., ' Wliat nioaiiH of aocosa exist ior IJiitisli inimin^rants to reach this s(itth'ment?' I think lliero an; no means to l)e recoininonded save tliose via tlie United States. The direct route IVoin Enghind via York Factory (Hudson's Hay), and also tliat from Cana(hi via Lake Superior, are too tedious, difTieult, and expensive for the generality oi' settlers. 'J'he manner in which natural obstacles liave iso- lated tJio country from all other British possessions in the I']ast is a matter of considerable weight ; indeed it is the obstacle of the country, and one, I fear, almost bevond the remedies of art. The egi'css and ingress to the settlement from the east is obviously by the Hod lliver valley and through the Stales." ]^^irther on thc^ same subject Captain Blakiston >vi'ites : " In answer to the fourth query contained in your Lordship's letter, viz., * AMiether, judging from the explorations y>;i! liave already made, the country presents such facilities for the construction of a railway as would at some period, thougli possibly a remote one, encourage Her ]\Iajesty's Government in the belief that such an undertaking, between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, could ever bo accomplishe I ? ' I have no hesitation in saying that no obstacles exist to the construc- tion of a railway from Red lliver to the eastern base of the Kocky Mountains ; and probably the best route would be found in the neiglibourhood of the south branch of the Sas- katchewan. An amount of capital very small in pro[)ortion to the territory to be crossed would be sufficient to accomplish the undertaking so far; but the continuation of a railway across the Rocky Mountains would doubtless require a con- siderable outlay. "In my letter to Her Majesty's Government, dated 7th Oct., 1858, 1 have referred to two passes examined by myself and IMr. Sullivan, my secretary, both of which I found prac- ticable for horses right across the chain of the Rocky Moini- ClIAP, XIII. CAIT. rAIJJSRR'S IJFI'OHT. 367 tains to tlin CoIuiiiImu liiv(M*, and that a small ontlay wcuM rendor tho more northern one practicable for cartH, and even waggons. "On tho return of Dr. Hector from his branch expedition, I found he had also crossed the niomitains as far as the valley of the Columbia ]{iver, by the Vermilion Pass, mIucIi leaves tho valley of tho Kow liiver nearer to its source than the pass I had myself traversed. In that pass ho had observed a peculiarity which distinguishes it from the others we had examined, viz., the absence of any abru])t step at tlic commencement of tho descent to tlie west, both ascent and descent being gradual. This, combined witli the low alti- tude* of the greatest elevation passed over, led him to re})ort very favourably upon the faciliti(^s of this pass for th(« clearing of a waggon-road ; and even that tho project of a railroad by this route across tho Rocky ]\[ountaius might bo rea soi i ably entertained." Before taking leave of this subject, I think it but right 1o correct another impression which appears likely to misUnid the public. This is, that the quantity of buffalo on the route jn'oposed to be taken by the bubble Overland Tran- sit Company is so great as to render it impossible for a man with a gun in his hand to starve. Now, although enor- mous herds of buffaloes may be met with — indeed Captain Palliser writes of them, "The whole region as far as the eye could reach was covered with buffaloes in bands varying from hundreds to thousands " — yet it is quite possible for tho traveller to die of slow starvation and exhaustion without seeing one. Dr. Eae, the eminent Arctic traveller, informed me that he spent three weeks in these plains with a party of gentlemen, and that during that time they saw nothing larger than a beaver, and only shot two martens ! Again we have seen that Dr. Hector was glad to tmvel * Kauanaskis Pass. .'ill iV "3"J. '',1 m % .11 4 308 DIFFICULTY (>F (JFTTING MEAT. Ciiai'. XIII. ^M W -i I 21 out of 2t liours lor want of food; and in a letter of (Jai»tuii» I'iilli.ser, written in the niidsuinnier of 1858, lie says: *'()ii my arrival at the IJow Fort, I found my liunterH waiting for me. They had been out in every direction, hut could not fall in with huffalo. They had also found elk and deer very scarce." In the same letter we also find him writing : "Owing to the absence of buffalo during the winter, my hunters, as well as those belonging to the Fort, have had to go to great distances in order to get meat, which they obtained in such small quantities, tliat the Hudson Vtay Company's ofllcor in charge of this post was obliged to scatter thn men, with their families, all over the plains in search of food. Even Dr. Hector and IMr. Sullivan were obliged to leave this post and go to Forts Pitt and Kdmonton in order to lessen the consumption of meat, of which the supply there was rpu'to inadequate. Fortunately, however, the winter has been an unusually mild one, otherwise the consequences might have been very serious indeed." Speaking of the mountains on the west side, Captain Falliscr also remarks: "'The fact is, the knowledge the Indians possess of the mountains is very snuill ; and even among those said to ' know the mountains,' their knowledge is very limited indeed. This is easily accounted for by the scarcity of the game, which offers no inducement for the Indians to go there." Dr. Hector also writes : " While traversing this valley, since coming on the Kootanie River, we have had no trail to follow, and it did not seem to have been frequented by Indians for years. This makes the absence of game all the more extraordinary. The only animal which seemed to occur at all was the panther. The Indians saw one : and in the evening we heard them calling, as they skirted round our camp, attracted by the smell." To this testimony of others, I may add my o\v!i experience. I have travelled GOO miles in British Columbia without seeing {'MAI'. Xni. l{(»rTK IN' AMKIUCAN TF.lUnTOUY. :w.) xperience. iinytliiii^ Iiir^'or Minn ^lYtiisc, or liavinti; tlio cliiiiu'o of uxoro than liaH'-ii-dozcn kIioIs at tln'm. J liav<« also had ocrnsion to speak of (Icatli by starvation anump; tlio Indians. This has boon bv nt moans unoonimon of late, sinco thoy have nonjh^ctod tlic cnltnro of thoir land for tho moro alhirinj; soaroh after gold. If, then, the nativo of thoso plains linds it inii)ossil)lo to s 'pport lifo npon the wild animals frcqnonting it, what chance, under similar eironmstancos, eonld tho artisan or tho peasant, fresh from the loom ori»lon;;h, be expected to have ? The last of tho routes which 1 have to consider is that across the continent in American territory. A way between Now York and San Francisco has been for some time open, and so regular and speedy is the transmission of mails by it, that tho American postal subsidy has been taken away from the Panama Steam Company, and giv(;n to the Overland. The traveller by this route proceeds by rail to St. Louis on the border of Illinois and ]\Iissouri. Thence by stage across i\Iissouri to St. Joseph, by the ^lissouri lliver to Omaha citv, and froni there across Nebraska and Utah to the Oreat Salt Lake city. From Utah the route passes southward of the Humboldt IVIountains to Carson city and into California. A telegraj)h now runs along the wliole of this line, Avhile a stage-coach goes three times and the pony- express twice a week — the latter making the journey in about seventeen days. The whole distance from New York to San Francisco is about 3000 miles, of which 900 are travelled over by rail. From San Francisco the traveller can reach his destination by land through Calilbrnia and Oregon to Portland, and thence by steamer to Victoria : or via the Columbia River to Walla-Walla and thence through Okanagan across to the Thompson River, and so direct to the mines. This route across the continent is considered pretty safe, and I know a 2 B W <' I i, In)!?., w lift'' It'll ^1 it! • »( > '! I.. 'It- is: 111 H ! ,*.ifH «.l if i 370 CHARACTER OF COAST LINE. Chap. XTII. lady who crossed by it ; but the mails are sometimes waylaid by Indians, and the passengers murdered or ill-treated. Before treating of the mineral resources of British Columbia, I will endeavour to describe its physical aspect. The coast of British Columbia is fringed with dense forest, some- times growing on low ground, but generally covering moun- tain-ridges of all shapes, which terminate in numbers of irregular peaks shooting up in every possible form and in heights vaiying from 1000 to 10,000 feet. All these ridges and peaks have the same general appearance, being composed of trappean or granitic rocks and covered with pine-trees to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet, and sometimes higher. Here and there the constant fires caused by the carelessness of the Indians have stripped the branches from all the trees on a hill-side, leaving nothing but scorched trunks standing on the blackened rock ; while in other places they appear stripped in the same way from top to bottom of a mountain, the whiteness of tlie trunk, however, forbidding the notion of fire. The reason of this phenomenon, which was of frequent occurrence in the inlets, caused us much speculation. The conclusion arrived at was, that it was caused by a slide of frozen snow from the mountain's summit. These mountain- ridges are divided at intervals all along the coast by the long inlets of which I have before spoken. Behind all these minor ranges and inland of the heads of the inlets, the Cascade Kange runs nearly parallel with the coast, and at a distance of CO to 100 miles from it, forming a barrier but too effectual to shut out intruders into the Eldorado that lies beyond it. The highest peak of this range is ]\Iount Baker, situated in latitude 48° 44' N. and con- sequently upon American territory. Its height is 10,700 feet, and it forms a prominent feature in the view from any part of the Strait of Fuca or Gulf of Georgia. Though, as 1 have mentioiiod when describing the inlets of the coast, there is Chap. XTII. Chap, XIII. THE CASCADE RANGE. 371* usuiilly a valloy, sometimes of considerable extent, at the head of tlieso sea-arms, the Cascade Mountains, as far as explorations have yet been carried, appear always to bar approach to the country beyond. Sometimes they recede from the coast so much that it is possible to steam 40 or 50 miles inland ; but in time the mountains are sure to be found closing in and barring farther progress. The valley of the Fraser River forms the single exception to this rule. Here the river has certainly mastered the rocks, and, attacking them from the rear, cut itself a devious way to the sea. But it has done no more, the rocks so closing in upon its course that, as in the canons I have described, there is hardly footing left for a goat along the high precipitous banks. These coast-mountains have as yet been imperfectly exa- mined, and little therefore is known of their geological formation or mineral resources. Dr. Wood, who, it will be remembered, accompanied me on my excursion inland from Jervis Inlet, says of those we passed on that occasion, " On the right side of the upper arm of Jervis Inlet the mountains, against whose sides the sea washes, give indications of being composed of porphyritic granite ; the granite rocks generally are deeply imbued with copper oxides ; their veins of white quartz are frequently seen intersecting the granite. The rocks forming the sides of the second inlet, some six or eight miles distant, are more rugged and precipitous, and consist generally of a strongly micaceous quartzose granite. A mountain-stream which we crossed, presented in the granite and trap Ijoulders, which formed its bed, singularly rich .specimens of iron pyrites without any observable indications of other metals. Upon another mountainous stream which we crossed, I saw the largest boulder of quartz (transported) I ever witnessed ; it must have been four or five tons' weight, and was deeply stained on one side with oxides of iron." During this journey, 1 perceived indications of nothing but 2 B 2 ^■> ;.* ■, lis. ili.i 372 GEOLOGY OF THE COAST. Chap. Xril. •ril ni ^! trap and granite, with hero and there thin veins of quartz. Indeed, I may say, that all the inlets surveyed by the * Plumper ' presented the same goolo<^ical characteristics. Texliada Island, which lies ofT the entrance of Jervis Inlet, is, however, an exception : nearly the whole of the northern end being limestone, mostly blue, but some white and compara- tively soft ; the blue being very hard. I found a few small outcrops of limestone in the entrance of Jervis Inlet after- wards, but they were only thin veins, round which the igneous rock had hardened. Clay-slate frequently occurs in the inlets, but usually in very small outcrops. I have re- marked its occurrence also in the canons of the Fraser Iliver, and Lieut. Palmer, R.E. when in the same range (Cascade) on tlie Harrison-Lilloett route, says, "From the cursory view I was enabled to take of the general geological character of the country, trappean rocks appear to prevail, consisting principally of greenstone, dense clay-slate (here and there presenting a laminated structure), and compact hornblende. The exposed surfaces of the roclis are generally covered with fels])ar, and are occasionally stained red with iron, forming an agreeable contract in the landscape. Quartz- veins permeate the clay-slate in many places, of an average thickness of one to twelve inches ; the formation, in fact, would suggest the high probability of metalliferous deposits. The mountains rise bold, rugged, and abrupt, with occasional benches on their sides, on which are found quantities of worn rounded boulders, principally of coarse-grained granite, oc- casionally porphp'itic. The granite contains golden-coloured and black mica in large quantities. The crystals of felspar in the porphyritic granite are very numerous, but small. The soil appears in many places to have been formed by the decomposition of granite, it being light and sandy and con- taining much mica. " Below the soil is very generally found a white compact .,■ ::|: ix Chap. XIII. GEOLOGY OF THE COAST. 373 mass, very hard and approacliinj^ to a e()nf>loinerato, containing pebbles of every description in a matrix of decomposed cluy- slate. Lime seems wanting; even in tbe conglomerate, and I saw no traces of limestone or sandstone all along the route, though I understand tliei'e is plenty of the former at Pavilion.* " Along the coast, between Jervis Inlet and Desolation Sound, the appearance of the rocks changes somewhat, and quartz and slate predominale. Speaking of Desolation Sound, IMr. Downie says, " This is the first time I have seen pure veins of sulphuret of iron, which looks very much like silver. ... I came across a number of seams of the same kind ; it lies in quartz, the same as gold. I have no idea that the gold is confined to the Fraser River alone ; and if it can only be found from the seaboard, or on the rivers at the head of some of these iidets, the country will soon be prospected." At the head of the same inlet, he says, " I have seen more black sand here in half a day than I did in California in nine years ; it looks clear and bright, as if it came from quartz." f Seeing it was out of the question to proceed farther, we jmt back, and came down along shore, breaking and trying the rocks, finding much iron pyrites and su'jhuret of iron, but no gold. In Knight's Inlet I have ««ientioned i)lumbago as having been foimd ; and on Queen Charlotte's Island (which may be regarded, in common with the rest of these islands, as chips off the coast), gold-bearing quartz and coal. Of the geological features of the interior little is yet known. Wherever I have been, the same trappean rocks pr(}dominate as on the coast, except at and around Pavilion, 220 miles up the Fraser, where limestone occin-s in large quantities. In the Cariboo district IMr. Nind, the Gold ♦ 'Blue Book,' part iii. p. 48, und ' Geograpliicttl Journal,' 1801, p. 231. t It is ill this black wiml that i\w loose gold is usually found. »' 7 "■'• 'I fJ; ■ ■ '5' pi M': ill it r '•'/" 6fi f $.«': V ^ 374 GEOLOGY OF THE INTERIOR. Chap. XIIl. !• 'i l M Commissioner, nays he has observed " masses of quartz ; " and when travelling near the Antler Creek, in the valley of which some of the richest diggings occur, lie says, " The streams I passed were very numerous; and where it was possible, from the falling in of the ice and snow, to observe their beds, I noticed the same characteristics of large quartz boulders and a kind of slate-rook, covered with red gravel, stxid to bear a close resemblance to the rich auriferous beds of the sti'eams of the southern mines of California. Of the Semilkameen district, in the southern part of the colony, Lieutenant Palmer, E.E., in his Keport quoted before, writes : — *' The geological character of the several districts (Fort Hope and Fort Colville) is throughout very uniform, the rocks belonging principally to the igneous and metamorphic series. The bulk of Manson ]\rountain * appears to be granite, tipped with slate ; here and there presenting particles of white indurated clay, found, on examination, to contain fragments of white quartz. " This formation may be said to consist of granite, with its felspar decomposed and reduced to a state of indurated clay ; it extends to the dividing ridge of the Cascades, and partly into tho valley of the Tulameen. In the latter valley may bo seen vast masses of white quartz ; in all probability the exposed face of the rock, whiah, Avith granite, constitutes a large portion of the district, extending into the Semilkameen valley. " On approaching the summit of the Tulameen range, the quartz partially disappears, and is replaced by a species of variegated sandstone, in which traces of iron occur. To what extent the sandstone prevailed I had no opportunity of judging, the weather being snowy while I was there, and the rocks, as a rule, imbeilded in peaty turf. A mountain a few miles north of Fort Hope. Chap. XIII. ClIAP. XIII. GEOLOOY OF THE INTERIOR. 375 " As we leave the Tulameen Mountains, and descend into the valley below, indurated clay appears to predominate to a considerable extent. This clay varies in character as we approach the Vermilion Forks ; a portion I noticed near that point being a white silicate of- alumina mixed with sand. On one si)ecimen which I picked up were the fossil remains of the leaves of the hemlock. "Further down, in the Semilkameen valley, the clay acquires a slaty texture, and becomes stained with iron, to a greater or less extent. Blue clay also exists, only, however, in small quantities. " The mountains bordering the Semilkameen consist chiefly of granite, gi-eenstone, and quartz, capped with blue and brown clay-slate. The beds of both the Tulameen and Semilkameen are covered with boulders of granite, of every descrijjtion and colour ; of greenstone and of trap, and vary in form and size. " J3oulders of the same character prevail on the river- bottoms, to a greater or less extent. Like that of most of the otlier explored parts of British Columbia, the geological character of this region apjjcars to indicate the high proba- bility of auriferous deposits. In the lower portion of the Semilkameen, and near the * Big Bend,' gold was discovered shortly after I passed through, by some of the men attached to the United States Boundary Commission, lleport pronounced the discovery a valuable one, as much as 40 dollars to the hand being taken out in three hours, without proper mining-tools ; but I cannot speak positively as to the truth of this state- ment, neither could I discover whether the place spoken of was in British or American possessions. Probability would suggest the former. Beyond Osoyoos Lake* I did not deem it necessary to pay much attention to the geological * A lake iu the Okanagau HIvl)', which fulls just on the liuuiuliiry lino. :.i*l i§- fl ■H1 1 s ; 'I 'I! ^;r! !l I i W t |;#:;t k m .1 ! ^ ilii'i^ 1 4 i 37G GEOLOGY OF 1111'] INTERIOR. Chap. XI H. character of the country, the route lyiujj; almost entirely in American possessions. Suffice it to say that but few features of interest presented themselves, and that in no place did I see any si[) iiiliind, and, from dip t«t strike, I nm sure it is about '10 fathoms below ; so that by eoiitinuinj^ the same shaft, if necessary, anotlier hir^'er seam eontaiiiiii^ milb'ons Nvill be arrived at; but tlie lirst seam will last my life, evcu with very lar;j;e works. With about aOOlV. or 8000/. I eoukl pet along well, and start a business doing from 00,000 to 100,000 tons a year. The price is 'Jfw. to 28,s'. alongside the ship." It will give a better idea of the comparative cheajmess (»f this coal if I say that at San Francisco the Nanaimo coal sells from 12 to 1.") dollars (21. Ss. to 3/.), while the eliea})est good English coal cost, when 1 was there, 20 dollais, or 4/. a ton, and it had been worth more than that. At Panama the U. S. frigate ' Saranac ' had to lay m some coal, and paid 35 dollars (7/.) a ton for it. I happeni'd to be in San Francisco later, when the same vessel came there to be docked. The coal was taken out to lighten the ship, and it was so bad and dusty that it was yot considered worth taking on board /.Ml] again. ^ Mr. Bauermann, the geologist of the lioundary Expedition, says of the Nanaimo coal : " Two seams of coal, averaging (> or 8 feet each in thickness, occur in these beds, and are extensively worked for the supply of the steamers running between Victoria and Fraser River. The coal is a soft black lignite, of a dull earthy fracture, interspersed with small lenticular bands of bright crystalline coal, and resembles some of the duller varieties of coal produced in the South Derbyshire and other central coalfields in England. "In some places it exhibits the peculiar jointed structure, causing it to split into long prisms, observable in the brown coal of Bohemia. For economic purposes these beds are very valuable. The coal burns freely, and yields a light [mlvereseeut ash, giving a very small amount of slag and clinker." * * ' Geological Society's Journal, 18G0,' p. 201. V 382 NANAIMO COAL COMrANY. Chap. Xlll. ,. . V .a. ill ^-t ^ ■ ii\ Tlioso l)0(ls were first bronpjlit to notiVo in 1850 by tlio Indians biiii^an^' some coal to ono of tlio ITudHon Hay Com- pany's a.ironts. This was ibniid on Nowcastlo Island, in tlio liarbonr, and tlioy said tlioy had seen the same on tho main- hvnd. It ]iroved to como from the ontcrop of tho Don^das seam, which was afterwards found to cross tho harbour to the island mentionod, where some of tho best coal is now takoii out. Since its discovery it has been worked by a ('om]»uny known as the Xanaimo Coal Company, which, ho\vev(>r, was really und(M' tho manap^ement of the Hudson Bay Company's ofllcials. (^uite recently, however, a new Company has been formed, who have purchased good-will, stock and fixtures. It is to bo hoped that better fortune will attend this enter- prise. Strange enough, whatever else than furs tho Hudson Hay Company meddle with appears almost invariably to prove a fixilure. They mismanaged affairs at Nanaimo, certainly. Good and expensive machinery was sent and fixed, but sufTicient capital to work it \¥as not forthcoming ; so that the managers were impeded at tho outset and, not enabled to develop the resources of the place. Tlu^ greatest objection to tho Nanaimo coal is its dust and dirt. It burns well, however, and H.INF.S. 'Satellite' was able to get better steam with it than with any other coal. We used it constantly in the 'llumper' for four years with- out having any other reason of complaint than the dirt arising from it. One of the originators of the now Company which has taken these mines assures me that one valuable quality of this coal is its adaptability for making gas. At San Fran- cisco and in Oregon it is preferred for this purpose to any other coal, on account of its being so highly bituminous. It may be remarked, that the deeper the workings at Nanaimo are carried the better the quality of the coal becomes. The natural resources of British Columbia, however, independently of its mineral wealth, are such as to n^.ake it well worthy of the consideration of agricultural settlers. Ciur. XI H. (WAr. XIII. "nOLMXO COl'XTUY" OF THE TNTERIOl}. .'{SM Aftortho rusriidc Uunp^ is passod, (tr fmtn T^ylton upwnnlH, tho oountry assumes uii cnfircly dirrcrcnt asjioct from that of tlio coast. Tim rloiiso pine-forests oeaso, and tlie land beeomeH open, elc^n*, and in tlie s|)rin<^ and summer time covered with buneli-^rass, whieh affords excellent ^^razin;.^ for cattle. Althou<;fh this country may ri^ditly l»e called open, that M'ord should not he understood in the sense in which an Australian settler, for instance, would accept it. There are no enormous prairies here, as there, without a hill or wood to hreak tlu; monotony of the scene far as the o\g can reach. It is rather what the ralifornians term " rolling" country," broken U[) into pleasant valleys and sheltered by inountain-rid;j,es of various height. These hills are usually well clothed with timber, but with little, if any, uuder;2:rowth. The valleys are ffenerally clear of wood, except alon;j^ the baidvs of the sti-eams which traverse them, on which there is ordinarily a sufliciency of willow, alder, i^c., to form a shade for cattle. The timber ui)on tlie hills is very Yv^lii, com- pared with its growth ujjon the coast ; indeed, there is nothiuf^ more than the settler requires for building, fuel, and fencing. Several farms are now established in diilerent parts of the countrv. I have mentioned one at Pavilion in the account of my journey there, and since there have been gi'eater facilities for obtaining land many others have, I believe, been stai-tcd. ]\rr. McLean, who was in charge of Fort Kamloops, when I visited it, has since left the Company's service, and culti- vates a farm near the Chapean Iiiver. lie has been many years in the country, and at Knniloops carried on consider- siderable farming operations on behalf of the Com])any. (Governor Douglas, speaking of this district, over which I travelled in 1859, viz. that of the Thompson, Buonaparte, and Cliapeau rivers, says : — " The district comprehended within those limits is ex- ceedingly beantifnl and picturesque, being composed of a succession of hills and valleys, lakes and rivers, exhibiting t ■ /i r»'^ ' '■:■ ^'\ mil ^-'1' ;' -: 'v :\ m V •Ji Ml > r ^■ .iii' .;^^' ^1 384 VALUABLE GIUZING COUNTKY. Chap. XIll. to the traveller accustomed to the endless forests of the coast districts the iimisual and grateful spectacle of miles of gi-een hills ci'owning slopes and level meadows, almost without a bush or tree to obstruct the view, and even to the very hill- tops producing an abiindant growth of grass. It is of great value as a grazing district, — a circumstance which appears to be thoroughly understood and appreciated by the country paclvcrs, who arc in the habit of leaving their mules and horses here when the regular work of packing goods to the mines is suspended for the winter. The animals, even at that season are said to improve in condition, though left to seek theii' own food and to roam at large over the country : a fact which speaks volumes in favour of the climate and of the natural pastures. It has certainly never been my good for- tune to visit a country more pleasing to the eye, or possessing a more healthy and agreeable climate, or a greater extent of fine pasture-land ; and there is no doubt that, with a smaller amoimt of labour and outlay than in almost any other colony, the energetic settler may soon surroimd himself with all the elements of affluence and comfort. Notwithstanding these advantages, such have hitherto been the difficulties of access that the course of regular settlement has hardly yet commenced. " A good deal of mining-stock has been brought in for sale, but, with the exception of eight or ten persons, there are no farmers in the district. One of those, Mr. McLean, a native of Scotland, and lately of the Hudson Bay Company's ser- vice, has recently settled in a beautiful spot near the debouche of the Hilt River, and is rapidly bringing his land into culti- vation. He has a great number of horses and cattle of the finest American breeds; and, from the appearance of the crops, there is every prospect that his labour and outlay will be well rewarded. He is full of courage, and as confident as deserving of success. He entertains no doubt whatever of the capabilities of the soil, which he thinks will, under 'HAP. xni. Chap. XITT. FARMING AT PAVTLT.ON. 385 proper managoraGnt, prodneo any kind of grain or root crops. The only evil lie apprehends is the want of rain, and the consequent droughts of summer, which has induced him to bring a supply of water from a neighbouring stream, by which he can at pleasui'e irrigate the whole of his fields." Again ; Mr. Douglas, in speaking of the farm at Pavilion, which I mentioned i'" my accoimt of that place, says : — *' I received an c'^H'Ay favourable report from Mr. liey- nolds, who commenced a farm at Pavilion in 1851), and has consequently had the benefit of two years' experience. His last crop (1860), besides a profusion of garden vegetables, consisted of oats, barley, turnips, and potatoes, and the pro- ts through which, perchance, ^ 2 f 2 4i> ■''I 388 LIEUT. PALMET^'S RE?Oiri\ CriAP. XIH. some small riviil(^t or spring wound its way to tlie river, wild vegetation was most luxuriant, and grass, some blades of which I measured out of enriosity, as much as nine feet high, well rounded and firm, and a quarter of an incli in diameter at its lower end. The river througliout its course is confined to a natural bed, the banlvs being steep enough to prevent inundation during the freshets (a favourable omen for agri- culture), and its margin is generally fringed witli a con- siderable growth of wood of different kinds." * In concluding his report he says : " Tlie present unde- veloped state of British Columbia, and the absence of any good roads of communication with the interior, would i)ro- bably render futile the attempt to settle the Semilkameoii and other valleys in the vicinity of the 49th parallel. Exten- sive crops, it is true, might probably be raised, but the immi- grant would have to depend for other necessaries of life either on such few as might from time to time find their May into the country from Washington territory, or on such as niight, during four months in the year, be obtained from Fort Hope and otlier points on tlie Fraser Iviver, and either of whicli could not be obtained but at prices too exorbitant for the pocket of the poor man. It would seem, therefore, that the Buonaparte and I'hompson Eiver valleys are the natural starting-points fwr civilization and settlement. Starting from these points, civilization Mould gradually creep forward and extend finally to the valleys of the frontier." t While quite agreeing Nvith Lieutenant Palmer that the Buonaparte and Thompson valleys have at i)resent the advan- tage of the Semilkameen, I think he overestimates some of the difiiculties of settling the latter. The great advantage possessed by the former is in the fact of their lying on the road to the richest diggings now worked in the country (Cariljooj. This, of course, enables the farmer to find a near * * Blue I5ook,* pnrt iii. p. 85. t Il.i(L Chap. Xlll. (.'IIAI'. XIII. rrvOsrEC'Ts of mining. .^89 utidcouvonieiit market for his produce; as, I'or iiistaiice, in one of the reports from which I liave quoted, IMr. lu'yuohls, a farmer tliere, is said to have sokl all or Ui-arly all his oats and barley m the sheaf to the mule-trains trading to the mines. Just now the Semilkameen country, in whieh very ricli diggings Avere discovered, has been deserted for the su[)erior attractions of Cariboo ; but a lucky Hud, wliicli is likely to occur at any time, will bring tlie minei-s hurrying bade again, to the profit, of course, of the settlers farming there. In proof of the probability of this occurring, it may be mentioned that in May 1861, 3[r. Cox (the Gold Commissioner at li(jck Creek) reports : " We prospected nine streams, all tributaries of the lake (Okanagan), i^ld found gold in each, averaging from thirty to ninety cents a pan." lie then mentions other good prospects which have not been made public, "as it would only lead to bad results just at present. The miners in this (Iioek Creek) neighbourhood would be easily coaxed off, and the mines now in preparatory condition for being worked, abandoned ; improvements going on in buildings or farms would be checked ; town lots would be almost unsaleable ; in fact, the expected revenue receipt would be seriously interfered with." * As to the necessaries and even the luxuries of life, there is no doubt that the settlers in the Semilkameen districts could command them cheaper and more readily than those upon the Upper Fraser, obtaining them as they might across the boun- dary from Walla- Walla and Colville ui)on the Columbia Kiver. I have before mentioned that this fact of the Americans carry- ing on a trade across the frontier was a great cause of com- plaint to the British merchants, who, having to take their goods up the Traser Iviver, found themselves undersold by their more fortunate rivals. To remedy this, in December 1800, an order was issued prohibiting the transmission of * ' liluu litwk,' part iv. p. 50. '; the settlements. An intendin;:: settlor lias merely to (ix ni)ou tlu^ site of his farm, and <^ivo such a description of its locality, houndaries, iVc, as ho is able to tho nearest magistrate, paying- at the same timo a fee of 8.!f. for its registration. These regulations extend, however, to KJO acres only. A settlor desiring to pre-empt a larger (juantity than that, must pay down an instalment of 2«. Id. [>er acre. This payment entitles him to jRissessiou of tho land until it is surveyed by tho Government, Avhcn tho full value at which it may be assessed — which cannot, however, exceed 46'. 2d. an aci'o — becomes payable. To prcn^ent specu- lators holding largo tracts of country, and thus keeping out bond fide settlers, land hold under tho pre-emption system cannot bo legally sold, mortgaged, or leased, unless tho pre- emptor can prove to tho magistrate that ho has made per- manent improvements on tho land to tho value of 10s. an acre. As this land-system is of great importance to tho intending settler, the latest proclamations upon tho subject are given in full in tho Ai)pendix. On Vancouver Island, although the quantity of agri- cultural land is very small in comparison with that in IJritish C'olumbia, there are many lovely spots for farms ; and the soil, wherever it has been tried, is very fertile. To name all tho clear spots on tho island would take too much space, and would be of no advantage to the settler unacquainted with the country. I will, therefore, merely speak of the larger tracts which have been examined, and of the system by which these, or any i)ortions of them, may be occupied. The districts of Soke and jMetchosin, at tho south-oast extreme of the island, contain a largo quantity of good land, much of which is still unsettled. Of the capabilities of this tract, I cannot do better than quote tho evidence of the late Colouel Grant, who was one of the llrst immigrants to Van- ll(:V :■'!■■ IK.--!-: ' 1, mm '"'iil '^ 'III III 'ai m"*i .■ if #■:: 394 SOKE AND METOiroSTN DTSTHICTS. Chap. Xlll. couvcr, and \vli<»se farm waH in this district. He says tluit ho Ibiind the soil prochifo ahiindantly, wlicn cultivated, any crojis tliat can bo grown in Scotland or ]']ni;land. Alter describing Soke Harbour, ho continues: — "Along the eastern shoro there is little or no available land. Fol- hnving the shoi'e of the harbour, .we come to no available land until half-way to the Indian village, which is situated at the bend above-mentioned; round it are a few hundred acres of available woodland. At this point the Soke l\ive]' discharg(!S itself, which takes its course in two lakes, one about 12 miles in a direct line to the north, and the other about 25 miles up. There area few patches of open meadow- land near the mouth of the river, on which the Indians grow considerable quantities of potatoes. Small canoes can go up the river to a distance of three miles ; there is a little level land along it at intervals for that distance, consisting of a rich alluvial soil, covered with a magnificent growth of timber. This land, however, where it exists at all, merely extends for a few yards back from the river, and beyond the whole country is utterly unavailable. From the mouth of the river all along the west coast of the harbour, the land is rich and level ; and, though at present covered with woodland, may, doubtless, some day be brought into cultivation. Near the entrance of the harbour, and running from it across a peninsula to the Straits, is a small prairie of 315 acres. The soil in the prairie is a rich, black vegetable mould from three to four feet deep, with a stiff clay subsoil, resting on sandstone, and the surrounding woodland also consists of very rich soil." Colonel Grant then proceeds to state that " five square miles, of which 330 acres in all are open land, and the remainder tolerably level woodland, will certainly comprise the whole available land in the district." In this estimate, however, there is no doubt that he. is a good deal under the mark. C'HAl'. Xlll. t'llAI-. Xlll. COWITCIIFA- VAI.M'.V. 3!»r) Iiumctliatcly roiiiul Victoriu, luul in tlic Siumitch district, on tlic pcniiisiilu spoken ol' i)('foro, is inncli pxxl luiul ; but this is now all or ncavly all S(>ttli'(l and under cultivation. Tlio Cow- itclicn Vulloy, wliidi I montioned in my journal as coni})risin<;- a very lar^^o quantity of available land, was survi.'yed in ISfiO, and in tin.' surveyor's report will be found the following re- marks : — "I am firmly }>ersuaded that under a common judi- cious system of farniinjj:, as pood returns can bo obtained from tlieso lands as in any part of the continent of America. The climate, it may bo noted, is one esi)0cially adapted for the pursuits of agriculture, not being subject to the heats and droughts of California, or to tho colds of the other l»ritisli American provinces and the eastern United States. The loamy soils everywhere possessing a (le[)th of two or three feet, and containing a largo proportion of the calcareous })rinciplc, are especially eligible ibr fruit-culture ; and the oak-plains around the Somenos and (^uamichan lakes,* with a sandy clay subsoil, are exceedingly well adapted for frnit or garden purposes. Among the native^fruits the blackberry, mulberry, raspberry, stiawberry, gooseberry, currant, and high bush-cranberry, would require little pains or culture to produce luxuriantly. The varieties of plants arc very numerous ; a few only were noted growing on the plains or meadow lands, among which are tho following : — Wild i)ea, wild beans* grou)id-nut, clover, field-strawberry, wihl oat, cut grass, wild timothy, reed meadow-grass, long si)ear-grasy, sweet grass, high ostrich-fern, cowslip, crowfoot, winter cress, partridge-berry, wild sunflower, marigold, wild lettuce, nettles, wild Angelica, wild lily, broad-leafed rush, and reed- bush. The ferns attain a height of six or eight feet, and the grasses all have a vigorous growth. " The following are some of the trees or shrubs : — Oak, red or swamp maple, alder, trailing arbutus, bois de Heche, * 111 tiiO Cowitclicii \ iilk-}'. ;jiii; TIIK SOMI.XOS VAfJ.KY. ClIAl'. XIII. (•nili-iti>|)l<', lia/cl-nut, red aldiT, willow, Idilsuni-poplur, [)it('li- juicc, iiiid V)i'. ions other itiK'cios; l)iilsiiiii-fir, codur, Iiarboiry, wild rod cliorry, wild Idiu-Ubcrry, ycdlow i»!uin, clioko-^-licrry, blade uiid red raspliorry, swiinip-roHe, bcarbcrry, ivd (ddal trade is with 8an Francisco, and froni the custom-house books we can learn the tonnage which has arrived at, and cleared from, California during the past year. From these we find a decrease in the trade of ]8(J1 from that of 18G0, which is owing, doubtless, to the increasing trade with England and the eastern states of America, and to the large stock left on hand from the pre- ceding yeai*! But of the export of gold we are unable to get any just estimate, on account of so large a proportion of it having been exported by private individuals, of which the Custom-house at Victoria takes no cognizance. \ye find from the colonial returns in January, 18()2, that the number of vessels, including steamers, that arrived at iSan Francisco was 46 ; the tonnage, 29,597 tons ; the total exports, not including gold, 48,905 dollars. Fifteen vessels, all steamers, left the colony in ballast, and consequently all the exports of the colony were carried in 31 vessels. The poits at which they loaded, the tonnage, and the value, were as follows : — Vosst'ld. Soke . . Naimiiiio Victoria 2 15 14 Toimat'i' Kxports. 570 4i>o2 Dollars. 6,500 34,124 8,381 t 1 : m This shows that Naiiaimo exceeds Victoria in ex})orts four- fokl, which is reasonable enough, when it is remembered that 400 COMMEllCTAL STATISTICS. Chap. XIII. »^f fill the coal exported from that port is known, while the gold sent from the other is not aseertaiiiablo. The comparison ahovo-mentioned of the years 1800 and 1801 shows a decrease of 11 vessels and 1 1,2!)1 tons arriving at ISan Francisco, and that the falling off in the number of vessels cleared for Victorin is greater than in the number entered. In 18G0, 110 vessels, with a total tonnage of 02,998 tons, cleared for British Columbia and Vancouver Island. In 1801 there were only 84 vessels canying 43,675 tons ; showing a decrease of 32 vessels and 19,823 tons. If Ave did not know that more gold has been found in that than in any previous year, this M'onld appear alarming ; but the fact being that the supply of gold is increasing, it must be attributed to the overstocked markets of J 800. This, indeed, I know was the case, for merchants at Victoria, well aware that good news from tlie upper country might at any time bring a rush of immigration, laid in a largi^ supply of such stores as would not perish, so as l6 be ready in case of emei-gency. The statistics of the treasure (coin) sent up from California show only two shipments: in January, 24,000 dollars, in September, 3500 dollars. This is doubtless true as regards the custom-house books, but that much more must hav»' come in some way is certain from the amount of dnst which Mas bough.t for cash in Victoria. Wells, Fargo, and Company, of whom I have before spoken, are stated to have sent down 1,339,895 dollars (279,145Z.) in gold-dust during the year 1801, and another Company (]Macdonald and Co.) to have shipped between June and December 290,895 dollars (()2,2()9/. 15s. lOd.), making a total of 1,030,790 dollars (342,414/. lis. 8rf.), of which a large part is said to have been paid for in Victoria. In the interior of the country the prices are never steady ; not only do they rise and fall with suminer and winter, but any delays on the route, the non-arrival of a pack-train when it is expected, or the influx of 100 or 200 men, will always run the prices up for u few days at least,. The whoh^ toji- ClIAP. XIII. PRICES CURRENT OF 1860-1. 401 dency, however, is doubtless towards cheapening the supplies as the communications beqome more complete and less liable to interruption from bad roads, &c. I have mentioned that the winter before I went up the country, i. e., 1858-59, bacon Avas selling at " Bigbar," 100 miles below Cariboo, at IJ dollars {C)s.) per lb., and flour at 75 cents (Ss.). I now give the prices current in the summer of 18G0. In September, 18(30, the prices at Alexandria, 100 miles South of Cariboo, were — * Flour per lb. Beans Bacon Sugar Rice Tea Coffee Lard Candles Soap Salt Pepper (ground) Yeast-powdcr Butter Rope Tobacco Potatoes Steel sbovels Picks Sluice forks Axes (Collins') Nails Quicksilver Oversbirts .. Undersbirts Canvas trousers Kentucky tweed trousers Corduroy (common) Boots Sliocs (common) „ Drilling .. .. per yard Duck „ per pair per tin ITcr lb. >> eacb per lb. £. 1 1 1 1 each » per pair » d. 2 3 1 14 3 1 u 1* Oregon blankets * ' Blue Book,' part iv. p. 43. 12 10 9 10 12 1 IZ. 12s. to 21. 8s. 14 13 3 4 2 2 D %% •:*!?!)' 402 PIIICES CURRENT OF 1860-1. Chap. XIII. '1 In September of the same year they were — ^ £. s. (1. Bacon per lb. 3 Su^ar »> 3 Flour » 4 12 Beans »> 14 Tea .. G 4 Coffee (green) » 2 8 Lard » 3s, to 3.s. 6(Z. Candles " 5 2 Soap " 2 Pepper (;:!;round) >» 04.- Yeast-powder per tin 4 2 Butter per lb. G 4 Popg per fathom 3 Tobacco (common) per lb. 8 4 Potatoes ,. 10 Onions » 2 Greysliirts each 10 6 Undershirts » 7 Canvas trousers per pair 10 6 Common corduroy trousers .... ,, 110 Boots (mining) » 1?. 13s. to 2Z. 2s. Shoes (common) » la Drilling per yard 13 Puck " 3 4 Oregon blankets per pair 2 2 Shovels (steel) <^ach 1 5 Collins' picks .. .. ...... ,,110 Sluice-forks .. .• •• >. 10 Axes »» 1 13 Quicksilver pci lb. 12 6 Xails M 2 Powder » 8 Lead „ 4 In January, 1861, we have the prices at Hope — Flour per barrel 1?. 8s. to 17. 12s. Bacon per lb. lOtZ. to llj'7. Beans , 2M. to 4r7. Sugar „ .5acon ,, 1 10 Lard „ 2 Su;j;ar „ 13 Tea „ .5 Coficc „ 2 At that time the rates of freinjht were very low, in oonsc- quonco of excessive competition ; only o/. per ton l)(ing charged from Victoria to Yale, wliile in the spring of ISfK) lOZ. per ton was charged. ]\Ir. Sanders, the Assistant Gold Commissioner at Yale, says : — " The miner and labonring man can live comfortably there on 3s. a day. Charge of restaurants is 21. a week. Rate of wages 10/. per month and keep." * He estimates the probable yield of the road-toll between Yale and Lytton for the year at — £. 8. d. 5000 nnilcs, 300 lbs. cacli, or 1500 tons .. 3000 400 tons by boats 800 750 tons carried by Lulians 1500 £5300 According to the list kept by him dnring the past season (1800), 2723 mules were paolvcd to the interioi- iVom that to\vn (Yale). The revenue of the district of Yah? for 18(iO was — £. ». d. Mining licences 207 Mining receipts (general) 201 f! 2 Tolls and ferries .' 238 17 5 Sales of lands 272 Fines and Fees 90 14 Spirit licences 320 Tracking licences 141 £.\T>?,C, 17 7 Since that time, however, some now roads have been •" • Rlnc Bonk,' part iv. p. 4R. 2 D 2 i^iiiH 404 PUBLIC WORKS. Chap. Xlll. ('(3mp]otod and several begun, and each mile of these makes things cheaper. AVriting at the same time, tlio Governor says : " The works wo propose to execute this year are as follows : — Miles. Cart-road from Pcmbcrton to Cayoosh, lengtli about .. .. 3G „ from Hope to Scmilkameen 74 Improvement of tlie navigation of tlie Semilkameen River .. GO Horse-road from Boston Bar to Lytton 30 „ from Ly tton to Alexandria 1 HO „ from Cayoosli to junction with Lytton lload .. 30 I)} I'rofjrcss. Road from New Westminster to Langley 15 „ from New Westminster to Burrard Inlet 9 „ from New Westminster to boimdary line at Scmialimoo 14 „ from Spuzzura to Boston Bar (nearlj' finished) .. .. 20 For these purposes he says the colony can find 25,000/., and asks for a loan of 50,000/.* If the routes which are now being tried between Bute Inlet and Bentinek Arm to Cariboo succeed, it will make a considerable change in the commercial position of the towns on the Fraser, and very probably some difference to Victoria. For Bute Inlet the traffic will still go in by the strait of Fuca and past Victoria, but if Bentinek Arm becomes a thorouglifare, vessels boimd thitlier will do much better to keep outside the Vancouver Island rather than go up the inner channels, for the entrance to Bentinek Ai-ra is 70 miles north of the north end of the island. It will be a considerable advantage to these routes if they are able to avail themselves of inland water-carriage, as it is always so much cheaper than land-carriage. I have mentioned in proof of this that on the Lilloett Kiver in the winter of 1858-50, the Indians wore taking goods up the river in their canoes for 5 cents (2Jf/.) per lb., while the packers on the trail were cliarging 15 cents (7ir/.). * ' Blue Book," part iv. p. 44. Chap. Xlil. ABUNDANCE OF FISH. 405 Mr. Nind, the magistmto of tlio Cariboo district, tolls me that the Fraser lliver between Alexandria and Fort George is navigable for steamers, and by the latest accounts a steamer is being placed on the river there. If the Htuart or West Iioad Kivers are found to be navigable also, it will shorten the coast routes both in time and expense immensely, and still more if the Bellhoida liiver is navigable for any distance from the coast. In speaking of the resources of these colonies, the immense supply of fish of all kinds must not be omitted. The quantity of salmon is almost beyond description ; but it will give some idea of it to say that a Hudson Uay Company's officer, who lived many years on the Columbia, told me that on a sudden falling of the water such numbers were left on the banks as to cause the river to stink for miles. The usual way of catching this fish is by spearing from the canoe ; in salt-water the Indians do this as they paddle about thr harbours, or, if it be at the mouth of a river, drive stakes in to keep the fish back, and then spear them while they are trying to get through. In the rivers a net is fixed into a frame ; the fish run into this and are speared, or, when the water is still, are taken out with a small scoop-net fastened on the end of a pole. They use spindles of the Thuja plicata as corks for the upper part of these nets, and weight the lower part with stones. " The rope of the net is made of Salix or Thuja, and tl. e cord of Apocymene piscatorium (A. hyperici- folium ?), a gigantic species peculiar to this country, whose fibre affords a great quantity of flax." * I have frequently watched this proceeding. Mr. David Douglas, the botanist, gives such a capital description of the way these nets are fitted, in his journal, that I cannot do better than transcribe it literally : — "The quantity of salmon (Salmo scoulieri? — llichardson) i¥^ iiiiidil .*«!! '*ii-i P*ii.^ * Dougluci, ' IJotaiiiciil IMiiguzinc,' p. W. 40G ABUNDANCE OF FI8H. Chap. XIII. taken in tlie Columbia, he says, is almost incredible ; and the Indians resort in great numbers to the best flsliing-spots, often travelling several hundred miles for this purpose. The salmon are captured in the following manner : — Before the water rises, small channels are made among the rocks and stones, dividing the stream into branches, over which is erected a platform or stage on which a person can stand; these are made to be raised or let down as the water falls or rises. A scoop-net \\'hich is fastened round a hoop, and held by a pole 12 or 15 feet long, is then dropped into the channel, which it exactly iits ; and tho current of the water carrying it down, tho poor fish swims into it without being aware, when the individual who watches the net instantly draws it, and iliugs the fish on shore. The handle of the net is secured by a rope to tho platform, lest the force of the current should drive it out of tho fisher's hands. The hoop is made of Acer eircuiatum,t\].Q net of the bark of an Apocymene, which is very durable and tough, and tho polo of pine-wood." He gives also the size of some fish, and an average weight rather higher than I should give ; but ho speaks of the Columbia liiver, where, perhaps, the fish are larger. He says they generally weigh 15 to 25 lbs. He measured two : one was 3 ft. 5 in. long, and 10 inches broad at the thickest part, weighing 35 lbs. ; the other 3ft. 4 in., and 9 inches broad, weighing a little less. Both were purchased for 2 inches of tobacco (about half an ounce) value two-pence. In England they would have cost 3/. or 4^. The mention I have before made of salmon being used as manm-e at Fort llupert will also give an idea of their quantity. Since the influx of whites into the country, the Indians ask a much higher price for their fish than they used ; but when I first went there, in 1819, I n^member the largest salmon bought on board weighed 50 lbs., and tlie price it fetched \vas two sticks of tobacco ! The sturgeon also is caught in very large numbers, and of JlIAl'. XIII. ; and tho iiig-spots, )se. The leforo the •oeks and which is m stand; er falls or , and held channel, • carrying iig aware, r (haws it, is secured )nt should le of Acer ch is very He gives •lit rather Columbia says they : one was kest part, lies broad, 2 inches of 1 England )eiug used a of their untry, the thoy used; tlie largest price it t'rs, and ot Chap. XIII. GAME IN VANCOUVEIJ. 407 great size in some parts, the mouth of the Fraser particu- larly. Mr. Douglas, tlie botanist, mentions one caught by one of my companions, wliicli measured 12 feet 9 inches from the snout to the tip of the tail, and 7 feet round the tliickest part, while its weight exceeded 500 pounds.* Hallibut also roach an immense size, and are caught in great numbers everywhere ; but, as I have said, particularly oft' the entrance of the Strait of Fuca. The herring literally s\\arni over the harbours in myriads ; nothing can give a better idea of the number of these fish tlian the way they are caught. A dozen or so of sliarp nails or spikes are driven into a flat piece of wood IG or 18 feet long, and 2 or 3 inches broad, making an instrument like a rake ; an Indian sits in tlie bows of his canoe, and dipping this down perpendicularly under water swoops it along towards the after end of the canoe, pinning some six or eight fish on the nails each sweep he makes ; every time he brings it u}), ko turns the nails points downwards, and gives the rake a tap on the gunwale, which knocks the lish off into the bottom of the canoe. In this way a man will often half fill his canoe in an hour or so. There is much more game on Vancouver Island than in British Coluuibia; when travelling in the latter, the absence of animal life has always appeared to me remark- able, while on the former it is generally abundant. On Vancouver Island, when I went from Aiberni to Xanaimo, I shot a wapiti and two deer, without going out of my way, and might have shot three or four more wapiti, if we had stopped to do so. This, it must be remembered, however, was in a part of the island before untrodden by man ; and a settler must not expect to meet deer straying about his fields, or he will be grievously disappijinted. In Columbia, on the other hantl, then are large numbers of mountain-sheep, which are * Douglas, ' IMcnioir,' p. 1>1, c;ii 408 TIMBER IN VANCOUVER. CUAP. XIII. unknown on tlio island. This animal is only found on the mountains whoso summits are covered with perpetual snow. I only saw one while I was in the country, and that was when in the snow crossing from Jervis Inlet to Howe Sound ; in- stead of wool it has a short thick coarse hair, and from this circumstance is called by the Company's servants mouton griff. I have never tasted it, but Mr. David Douglas says " the flesh is fine, quite equal to that of the domestic sheep." He adds, "the h)rns of the male, weighing sometimes 18 to 24 lbs., are dingy white, and form a sort of volute ; those of the female bend back, curving outwards toward the point." I think Mr. Douglas is wrong as to the colour of the horns. I have seen many of them among the Indians, by whom they are made into spoons, and they are far more generally black than chngy white. The great set-off that Vancouver Island has against the gold of British Columbia, is her timber ; for though timber abounds in British Columbia, we came upon no place there where such fine spars were to be found, and with such faci- lities for shipping as at Barclay Sound and the neighbourhood of Fort Rupert. The following is the list of trees found at Barclay Sound, as given by the woodsmen emjiloyed there by the ]\[ill Company already spoken of. I give first the local names, the scientific being appended, so far as they are known, by Dr. Lindley : — Yellow Fir, or Douglas Pino, sometimes uiisnamcd Oregon Tine — Abies Donglasii. White Fir — probably Abies alba. Spruce Fir — probably Abies nigra. Balsam Fir — Abies balsamea. Willow Fir — Salix rostrata. White Pine — Pinus monticola. Yellow Pine. Cedar — Possibly Juniperus occidcntalis. Alder — Probably Alans viridis. Dogwood — Comus alba. Yew — Taxus "baccata. 32:011 riiiu — Chap. XIII. QUALITIi:S OF THE T1M13KU. 400 Crab-aiii)lc — Pj-rius rivuliuis. Maplo (two kinds)— Acer inacropliylliuinuKl iirolniltly Acer rubruni. Ilc'iiiluck — Abies Caiiiulieiisis. Cotton Wocxl — L'opuluH balsaniifoia, or ropulus inonilifera. Asjieii — I'oimhis tioiimloitlcs. Arbutus — Arbutus iiroccira. Yelluvv Cypress — 'I'liuja "^igantca. Foremost among them all stands the Donj^las fir (Abies Dunglasii), named alter its discoverer, David Donf:;las, the botanist. As timber for spars or plank, this tree is nn- equalltnl. It j?rows to the height of 200 to 300 feet, and usually as straight as an arrow. This wood has been planted in several places in England, and sliould become one of the common trees of this country. The value of this wood for spars has been tested and reported on by the engineer of the French dockyard at Cherbourg, whose report was greatly in its favour. As plank, it is equally line. Dr. Lindley tells me he has had two planks, about 20 feet long each, which have been in his house in a room where there is constantly a fire, since 1827, and tliat neither of them has warped or shrunk the least since they were first i)laced there. The following extract relating to the Douglas fir is from the ' Gardeners' Chronicle ' : — " We now know that this most beautiful tree, the Douglas fir, is unsurpassable in the qualities which render timber most valuable. It is clean-grained, strong, elastic, light, and acquires large dimensions in ungenial climates. It thrives everywhere in the United Kingdom, except the extreme north, and is therei'ore of all trees that wliich most deserves the attention of planters for profit. To which we may add that no evergreen surpasses it as an orna- ment of scenery. " Little or nothing ^vas known of the Douglas fir until it was brought into notice by the Horticultural ^Society, which received its seeds from the hardy collector whose name it bears, and distributed some thousands of young plants among its Fellows. As this happened about five-and-thirty years ■.;!■ • ' \i\< ] -I ij! 1.(1' f|!' fij Ii lii ' / 410 TIIK DOUGLAS FIl!. Chap. Xlll. ttj^o, tlioro must already bo uu ubundanco of good spoelmcns in tlio country. Tlu; i)ur[)oHo oC this noti(,'o is to incroaso tlit'in to tlu' utmost, l»y inducing landed proprietors to substi- tute the Douglas lir for the; very inferior spruce. " The Douglas lir makes its first api)caranco on the moun- tains of Northern j\[exico, in the country near the lieal del IMontc mines. Thenco it follows northwards tho \vest(}rn slope of the liocky iMountains, at least as high as the now celebratcul but savage Carilxeul', or Cariboo gold-field, in IJritish C'ohuid>ia. Douglas, the collector, who crossed the liocky 3Iountains a little to the south, through the 'Com- mittee's I'unchbowl Pass,' reported that it i'cjrmed vast forests there on the lower ranges, and struggled upwards till it became mere scrub. AVe ourselves had, till lately, bark of the tree from those desolate regions fully six inches thick. A spar of this fir, more than 200 feet high, has been erected in the lioyal Botanic Gardens at Kow ; and sections, cut at intervals of 15 feet, of a tree oOl) f(,'et long, were sent to this country for the International Exhibition. A horizontal secti(jn of another tree having been sent for the same pnr[)ose, a careful examination of it was made to ascertain its age and rate of growth. The result of this examination, which has a}>pearcd in the '(lardenors' Chro- nicle,' will bo found interesting, " The diameter is (J feet, viz., 31 inches on one side, '68 on the other. Its rate of growth on the ol-inch side has been as follows : — Years. " The first 2 inches across were made in 7 Tlio second „ „ 9 The third „ „ 12 Tlio fourth „ „ 19 The fifth „ „ 17 The sixth „ „ 23 • Tlic seventh ., „ 16 The eijrhth „ „ 17 Carried lorwani 120 CiiAi'. Xlll. Tin; DOIKILAS FIl?. 411 Vt'ttr*. 13iuu;4lit lunvanl I'JO The iiiiitli „ ,, 14 Tliu iLiitli „ „ IH Tlie L'luvintli ,, ,, Ii4 The twolltli „ „ 21 Tlie tliirteeutli ,, „ L'4 Tho fuurk'eiith „ „ '_'4 The firicciitli „ „ 31 'I'lio sixlci-iith „ ,, 0(1 Tho scivi'iitcciitli ,, ,, 4'J Or ."jl iiiclu'S in soiiii(li;unut(!r in 35i *'lt is a^* well to remark tliiit this IJritisli ColniiibiiMi tir, iiltliou^li tlireu centuries and ji-lialt' old, and ultlioi; 'h i'or tlio lust I'orty-two years it increased littlo more than l-lOth of an inch in diafneter yearly, is pcrfeetlij sound to the heart. Foresters will nnderstand tho im})ort;»nce of this fact," jMr. Sprout, tho IJurclay Sound jMill Company's af;"ent at Victoria, says of this wood : — " Tho bark of tho tree is very like that of the Canadian henduek. At its base, and for some distance up, the bark is often a foot thick; the sap is always thinner in proportion as the bark is thick, and vice, versa. l'h(,' sapi)iest trees are tliosc that grow in the sun- shine. Tho wood varies in colour; a yellowish colour ]>re- dominates, though a good many arc rcMldisli. 'i'lie colour ai)pears to depend much on tlie ago and situation of the tree, on its greater or less exposure to the sun." The cone of this tree can never be mistaken, as on the outside of each scale is a sort of cla\v, with three fingers to it, distinguishing it plainly from all other fir-cones. The white fir (Abies alba) is poor, com})ared with the Douglas, tlujugh the trees are often a considerable size. The white pine (Pinus monticola) makes very good plank for building purposes. The yellow cypress (Thuja gigantea), ^\hicIl abounds more in the north than the south of th(3 colony, is a very useful -:>M' Iff ,.;;; it !i': ii If I 412 FRUITS AND SHRUBS. Chap. XIII. rl wood, liglit, tough, aiul elastic ; it makes the best plank for boat-building that I have ever seen. Its leaf differs from that of the other and common cypress (Thuja occidentalis), in being convex on both sides. For ornamental purposes the bird's-eye maple (Acer macro- phyllum), dogwood (Cornus alba), cedar (Juuiperus occi- dentalis), and arbutus (Arb. procera), are all valuable. The maple and cedar are very plcutiful, and the latter grows to a great size. The fertility of the soil wherever it has been tested is, as I have before said, great; and the quantity of wild fruits and flowers wliich abound everywhere is very remarkable. In all fewampy places cranberries of two or three sorts grow so plentifully that a flourishing trade is driven with them at San Fiancisco. Wild strawberries and raspberries, sfJlal, barberries, black and blue berries, salmon-berries, era-rants, and gooseberries abound. In the summer, when we were away surveying, the Indians brought such quantities of these alongside that the whole shi^j's company were usually sur- feited before the season was ovei-. There are also several kinds of bulbous roots, the com- monest is the cainass (Scilla esculenta), of which the Indians eat a great deal ; it has a slight onion flavour, but is sweet. I need not attenn)t a detailed account of the plants and shrubs of the colonies. Mr. David Douglas has described many ; and a fuller account may bo expected from Dr. D. J^yall, who has been attached to the liouudary party, and with them examined the country from the coast to the summit of the Ivock} Mountains. I may mention, however, that hops grow remarkably well, and that a species of tobacco and tea are to be found in Columbia. The former of these was first collected by Mv. Douglas, who says, "Among the most interesting of the plants which I gathered last year (1825) is a species t»f tobacco, the Nicotiana pulveruleula of litush, correctly sur- AP. XIU. Chap. XIII. TOBACCO — TEA. 413 it plank 3rs from oiitulis), r macro- ns oiici- J* 10 latter eel is, as Id fruits arkablo. rts grow tlioni at i, SfJlal, -Ttrrants, we wore of these illy siir- lio com- Iiidiaiis sweet, iints aiul escribed 1 Dr. 1). rty, aiitl to the jly well, bund in by 3Ir. of the ecios of ;tly sur- mised by Nuttall to grow on this side of the Ivocky IMountains ; though whether this country, or the iiocky ^Fountains them- selves, or the banks of the JMissouri, be its original habitai., I am quite unable to say. I am inclined to think, however, that it is indigenous to the mountains, where the hunters say that it grows plentifully. The Nicotiana is never sown by the Indians near the villages, lest it should he pulled and used before it comes to perl'ect maturity. They select for its cultivation an open place in the wood, where they burn a dead tree or stump, and, strewing the ashes over the ground, plant the tobacco there. They say the wood-ashes invariably make it grow large."* I have smoked this at Fort Kam- loops, and liked the flavour — which was similar to that of mild tobacco — very much. Tlie wild tea-leaf resembles that of China tea. I have never tasted it, but jMr. Pemberton says, " its flavour is not bad and effect exhilarating." He adds, "Some years ago the Hudson Bay Company imported a cargo, but it was stopped at the Custom-house and thrown overboard to avoid the duty." t I have been favoured by my friend Dr. Wood, of H.3I.S. ' Hecate,' with the following remarks upon the natural history of the two colonies. I have much gratification in being able, by Dr. Wood's friendly compliance with my request, to lay before the reader information so trustworthy and valuable. " In the following remarks I do not assume to give more than a cursory sketch of those sections of the natural In'story of British Columbia and Vancouver Island whicli are of most iutere;,t to the genei -1 reader. Separated by a few miles of ocean, the Fainia av.;.; T ' ^'■^. of both colonies are the same — insular position and a less e-xtei .-.ive area, howevrr, causing one to bo sparse in many things which her larger neighbour possesses in ])rofusion, while again the ocean-washed shores of the? western 'm- ■ii'ti * Jniirniil of Iilr. Duvid Dousliis. t PfiiilKTtiin, p. 20. 414 SKETCH OF NATURAL IIISTOrY. Chap. XI 11. ,1 m 1 fe-f; I ] .^il ImA side of Vancouver Island are ricli in resources whieli British Columbia possesses less ahnndantly. As I am personalh' better acquainted -wilh Vancouver Island, and as kss is known of it than of liritisli Columbia, I will in a great measure confine my ren^arks to the fonner, asking the reader to remember, however, that, iMiless the contrar}' is indicated when speaking of either colony, I inclndo both. " I pass over 1h j First and Sucond Orders of ^Miimmals (the first endjracing the peculiar province of tlie l^^thnologist ; the second, or monkov-like animals, not being represented in thes(i colo- nies), and commence with the Cainivora, thcs first and second families of which are also sparingly represented. Among them arc " Bkaiis. — The Black Bear, (n-sKs Amerirarnitt, is often seen, and falls easily to the gun of the sportsman. Cnless when woundrd, it never attacks man. This bear is chiefly a vegetable feeder. The flesh is ccarse, but good ; and the skin, which is of little marketable value, makes a good nig. " Tile Grizzly, Uvhuh horrihilis, is not found on the Island : it is sometimes shot in British Columbia, Init its chief home is the lioeky ^Mountains. It is wisest to leave him mnnolcsted. " The Bacoon, Crsus lotor, is a liarmless animal, easily tamed. It feeds mostly on wild fniits and, it is said, small birds. It is very numerous in some parts of tlie coast. "Maktkns. — Tlie yellow-breasted or Bine IMarten, Mnstda mark's, and one of a whole eohiur, arc vt'ry numerous. Their skins are in great request, and are collected in hn-ge numbers by the fur-traders. A good one is worth fi-om (>s. to B.v. The Common Miidc, Paforiiis vison, is also found in great nnmbcrs. The Skmik is also frequently seen. " Oti'KKS. — The Land Otter, MuatcJa Jnfra, is fn-quently shot by the Indians. The skin is of little vabu>. The Sea Otter, Enhjdm marina, is found throughout tlie north-west coast of Vancouver. The skin is much sought after, being an extremely valuable fur. The skin of a full-sized one, undressed, and measuring G feet, commands the i)rice of thirty blankets — 12/. to 14/. They are sent to England, and, when dressed, forwarded to China, where the finest sometimes fetch 100 dels. (American) apiece. ""Woi.vi'S.— Two species of wolf are known to tlie settlers, and are commonly spoken of as the Bed and Black Wolf Tliey do not much fiequont the settled districts except in winter, Avhen ClIAP. XIII. SKETCH OF NATURAL HISTORY. 415 they aro very (Icstnictivo to sliceji unless watched. They arc cowardly, and I have not hoard of their ever attacking nun. "Fo\i:s. — Thei'o are two varieties of this animal, the ' I{ed ' and ' Silver Fox.' The latter is found in British Columbia, not upon the Island. " The American Panther or Puma, Felis cnncoJor, is often shot upon Vancouver Island. They are destructive to sheep, and more particularly to pigs and poultry. When followed, they often lake refuge in a tree, from whence they are easil}' shot hy a common fowling-piece. Dogs will also attack them. They aro quite harndcss to men. '• Si:ai,s. — One variety of Seal frequents th<^ mouth of the Fraser liivor, Pritish ('oluml)ia, where it may constantly be seen by visitors in sinnmer, seated <.n a log of wood dvifling downwards with the current. Another is found on the sea-coasts of \'an- eouver Island, and is shot in some numbers by the Indians, who sell thei]' skins to tlie fur-tradcis. "The Squiri'ol. Srinnts (Cnv.), is very numerous throughout tlu> pine forests, feeding on the cones of the various fir or pine trees. They are shot in great nundjevs for the tal)le. and aro exeellent eating. There are two or three varieties, smaller and otherwise characteristically difffMcnt from the English species. Groinid s(piirrels are also found. "The Marmot, Avctuini/s mondx, is ke)it by the settlers some- times as a domestic pot. It is said that rats never stay in a house in which a marmot is a resident. "The European Pat is very connnon on the Island In settled districts, as much a pest as it is at homo. Hoth rats and mice indigenous to the Island and British (.'olumbia exist, but they do not require separate mention. "The licaver, Castor Caiiadkmis, is found on the Island, and also in British Columbia. Very few are now trapped for the sake of their skins. They are sometimes shot by J'Jiropoans for the sake of their llesh, which is palatalde. The tail, which is extremely fat, is considered a delicacy, and somewhat resembles the fat of the turtle. A few years ago 7S0 bcavcr-.skins wore traded in a twelvemonth at one establishment of the Hudson Bay ( 'ompany on Vancouver Itiland. The I>eaver, as also other fur-bearing animals, is said t(j be increasing in numbers since the partial settlement of the western shores of North America, from the ftict of its being less molested, owing to the employ- ment of the ' trapper' in other pursuits. ■Si.H rM ' 416 SKETCH OF NATURAL HISTORY. CUAP. XIII. " I havo not seen a specimen of cither a ITarc or Rabbit obtained from Vancouver Island. Several varieties of both exist on the neighbouring ci>ntinent and throughout liritish Columbia. They diflcr much, however, from the English varieties, both in habits and appearance. " The Canadian Stag or Wapiti, and the Elk, Cervits Canadieusis, exist in numbers ; they sometimes equal the horse in stature, and I have known them shot, weighing, when dressed, 000 lbs. The horns arc very handsome. The Black-tailed Deer — the Fallow IJcor of the Tacific, Cerviis Columhianns — are foiuid throughout both colonies, and are very numerous on the small islets, to which they swim, I believe, to escape the wolves. They become, in certain localities, very fat towards autumn, but, though excellent, want the flavour of English venison; from no to 80 lbs. is an ordinary weight. The district of Cariboo in British Columbia, now so noticeable for its produce of gold, is so called from a largo deer which frequents its pasturage — pro- bably the Rangifer caribou of Audubon. The ' Mountain Goat ' and the ' Mountain Sheep ' are found in the mountains of British Columbia. I am not aware of their existence on Vancouver Island. "The American Buffalo, Bos Americanns — has lately found its way, it is said, through the Eocky IMountains to the upper plains of the Columbia, " Cktacea. — With this order of mammals I am little ac- quainted. AVhales, * Black-fish,' and Porpoises aro common off the coast of Vancouver and the inland sea separating it from British Columbia. Considerable ingenuity is shown by the Indians in the capture of the whale. A seal-skin, prepared so as to bo air-tight, is attached to a haqwon, the head of which, with a short rope made from cedar-bark, can bo detached from the staff. With this attached to him, the whale is not long before ho makes his appearaacc above water, when he is killed by spears, great numbers taking part in his destruction. Tlie flesh is much esteemed by the natives as food. '• BiUDS OF Prkv, Faptoves. — A frequent object met with on the coast-shores of both colonies is the White-headed Erne or Great Fish Eagle, Falco kncocephahis. Couples of these birds are frequently seen sailing majestically in air, descending occa- sionally in graceful circles to their abode in some tall pine-tree where their nest is placed. Another common object is the American Osprey or Fish Hawk, Pandion Carolinensis. The Ilar • ClIAP. XIII. SKETCH OF NATURAL HISTORY. IIV rier and tho Sharp-shinned Hawk, with several others, are also constantly met with. The 'Great Snow Ow],' Xi/dea nivea, and the Pigmy Owl, Glaunjdium (jnoma — not so large as an English hlackbird — arc also found, with several others. " ScANSoiiKS. — In this order occur the Cuckoos. I have not seen a specimen on tlie island or in British Cohnubia, but their note has been heard by myself and. others. The \V'oodpeckerH are numerous: thus, I maynamQ I'icus JIarrisii ; Sj)h>/ni/>icus ruber, or Ked-breasted Woodpecker ; Colaptis Mexkanus, or Iicd-shafted. " lx.si:s.soRi;s. — I have collected three varieties of Humming- birds on Vancouver Island. These beautiful little creatures make their appearance early in spring, even before the snow has left the plains, buz'-'.ing their way from bush to bush in restless search of some half- opened blossom. The Indian boys snare them in numbers, and, fastening a dozen or more to a stick by one foot, bring them off alive to tho ships for sale. A Night ILiwk — known among settlers as the Mosquito Hawk — breeds upon the island, and makes its appearance on summer evenings. A common object along the sea-coast and the mouths of ri\ers is the Belted Kingfisher, Cenjlc ulcyon — a much larger, but not so handsome a bird as the English Kingfisher. Tho Flycatcliers have several rciireseutatives. Tho Singing Birds are few. Amongst tho Swallows may be named the Violet-green Swallow, Ilirundo thalamtui. Wrens, Creepers, Nut-liatches, Titmice, Shore Larks, Finches, the Eed Crossbill, Ciirvirostra Aimricaua, the Snow Bunting, Sparrows, tho Eed-winged Blackbird. Among the ciows may be named the American Itaveu, tho Fish Crow, the Common Crow. Jays, Cyanura stelleri. " Easorks. — Pigeons and Doves are represented in both colo- nies. A more numerous family exist in the Grouse: the Dusky Grouso, Pdras ohacuras ; the Blue Grouse of settlers ; tho Iiutled Grouse, IJotiasa umhellus ; and the \\ illow Grouse, LaqiipHs alhiis, are found on Vancouver Island in immense numbeis, and also in British Columbia, which has several other varie- ties, — the Sage Cock, the Sharp-tailed Grouse, tho Pniirie Hen, and Ptarmigan : all of these are excellent eating, but are too easily shot to aftbrd much amusement to an English sports- man. The Blue and tho Kullod Grouse roost on tiees during tho day, when not sunning themselves on some hillock or i)rostiato trunk of a tree, where their ' drum' is loudly hoaril. Tho Blue Grouse reaches tho weiglit of 4^ lbs. ; it may often be sck'u perched ou the topmost brarch of some tall pine-tiee, from 2 E .ti i :'l y it' tU u 418 SKETCH OF NATURAL HISTORY. Chap. XITI. whonco ho refuses to move for repeated charges from an ordinary fowling-piece, and is only to he hronght down by a rifle. As the country becomes cleared, their habits will probably change, and Vancouver Island will bo as noticeable for good sport as Scotland. " Gkaij.atorks. — The Great lUne ITeron or ('i'ane,.bY/^a hcrodittf?, is frequently seen and shut. In the snb-order (imllw may be enumerated Golden Plover; Kill-dcor ; King Plover; the Surf 13ird, Ap/iriza vi>r;rifa ; IJachman's Oyster-catcher, Jhvmiitojins ni(/<')', and Turnstone ; Wilson's Snipe, or English Snipe ; Grey Snipe; Jack Snipe ; Sandpipers; and Sandcrlings. " \atai(u;i:s. - Swans arc often shot on the lakes of \ ancouver Island and British Columbia ; and on the approach of winter myriads of Geese arrive : among these may be named the Snow Goose, Aiiser lij/perlioinis ; the \\ hite-fi'onted Goose, A)iser gamheh'i ; the Canada (Joose, Bernk-la Cnnadienm ; the I'rant Goose. The Canada Goose is often shot 17 lbs. in weight. The Ducks are innumerable. Amongst them are found the ^Mallard, Anas hoscha.s ; lilack Duck, Anas obscitra ; Pintail, Dajila acuta; Green-winged Teal, Nettion Carolinensis ; the Shoveller, or Spoonbill, Spatula chjpeata ; American Widgeon, Mareca Americana ; the Summer Duck, Aix sponsa ; the Scaup Duck, Fnlix marila ; Canvas-back, Ai/thi/a vallisneria ; the Golden Eye, Bucephala Americauii, and- alheota or Buffle-head ; the Harlequin Duck, Ilistrionicus torqnatns Amongst the Sea Ducks arc the Velvet Duck, Melandta vchefina ; the Surf Duck, PeVionr.tta perspuillata ; the Scoter, Oidemia Americana. Among the Fishing Ducks is the Goosander, Mevijus Americanus ; the I fed-breasted Merganser, Jifergus serrator ; the Hooded Merganser, Lophodi/tes cncnUatus ; and I believe a fourth which is not named. In the sub-order Gavia;, I may mention the Sooty Albatross, Diomedia faliginosa ; and two or three Petrels. Among the Gulls, the Glaucoiis-wingcd Gull, Lams glanccscens ; the Herring Gull, Lams argcntatm : the "Western Gull, Larus occidentalis. Among the Cormorants, the Violet-green Coimoraut, Graculas violaceiis, is extremely common. In the family of Divers aro the great Northern Diver, C'nhjmhus j/laciahs ; the Plack- throated, Colgmhus arcticns ; the racinc, Cohjmhns Parijlciis ; and the Ked-throatcd, CoJi/mhus scptcntrionalis. The tufted Puffin, Mormon cirrhnta ; the Horn-billed Guillemot, Cerorhina monoceratu are numerous on the sea-coasts of Vancouver and its adjacent islands, and the sea around them is often literally alive with the Sea Dove or Dovekie. f'liAP. XIII. SKETCII OF NATURAL HISTORY. 410 " Tho Rkftilia do not roquiro an extended notice. Several varieties of Snakes are met with, but they are not, I believe, venomons. Lizards and Frogs are numerous. The Hull-frog in summer is rather a nuisance by his loud croakings. The Indians are partir.l to snakes as an article of diet; immediately they are caught they are skinned and eaten by them, as a stick of celery is eaten b}' a schoolboy, and with as little cooking. " FisiiKS. — The fish of Vancouver Island and British Columbia require a more extended experience than mine to do justice to them. I cannf)t, however, but think that, among the domestic resources of both colonies, few can equal their value. Tho seas and lai'go inlets, the bays and rivers, are literally alive with fish. Salmon, Cod, Halibut, Sturgeon, Herring, Trout, Smelt, Sea Perch, Hake, Sardines, Anchovy, Flat Fish, Dog Fi.sh (highly useful for oil), and the Iloulakan, so called by the Indians ; the latter, the sizo of a herring, makes its appearance with un- erring regularity in various parts of the coast for a few days only, and is taken in shoals ; it is so fat on its arrival as to defy ordinary cooking, melting by th.e heat ; it is pressed for oil by tho natives, who trade with it in British Columbia with the inland tribes, and is 'also dried, in which state, lighted at one end, it makes a capital torch, and is constantly used as such by the Indians. The oil has been used medicinally in place of cod- liver oil, and I have seen the happiest eifects from its administra- tion. So numerous are the Salmon, that rivers become olfcnsive from the putrid bodies of those who have failed to make their way up the ' falls ' of tho various rivers. Tons' weight of Halibut may bo caught in a day. The shores are thickly covered with Acorn-shells, Limpets, Muscles, Clams, &c. Crabs of many varieties are found everywhere, some edible, and of large size. The Shrimp is a constant visitor in the dredge, and Prawns are extensively caught in the neighbourhood of Victoria, Vancouver Island. Every pool is lined with brilliant Sea Anemones ; and nearly throughout the year is the sea lightened with ]\Iedusa). " Flora. — In the magnificent work of Sir W. J. Hooker, 'Flora P>oreali Americana,' maybe found an epitome of the botany of these colonies. I will confine my observations, there- fore, to an enumeration of the Natural Orders, which contain most of the Flora of interest to the settler. " Order 1. Xi/mphccarecv, Water-lilies. ♦' ,, 2. lianuticuheea', Crowfoots. " „ T). Crucifcnv, Cressworts. 2 E 2 \\ lit 1 m < ti, r5 420 SKETCH OF NATURAL mSTOPiY. Chap. XIII. " Oidoi' 7. Jiorhcrklacecp, r)crTiicrrvwort8. Tlio ' ()rop;oii f J rape ' of tlio settlers is a small slinil) very common in the woods ; it l)ears a ytdlow flower, and produces a cluHter of berries of a deep blue colonv, of a pleasant aciel, astringent taste. The root yields one of the best known yellow dyes. "Order 8. ViohiLnp, Violetworts. " ,, 10. dcraci'or, IMaplcs. Tho IMaple grows to a large size, and is extensivel}' found ; it produces by the changing hues of its foliage a handsome object in the somewhat monotonous landscape of the colonies : its wood is very inferior. " Order 17. Get'a>iiaci'(c, (.'I'ancsbills. " ,, 21. Ji/iainiKiceit; lihamnads. " „ 22. Fahacecv, Leguminous Plants. Jicpresentativcs of their order are extensively found. Tho lUue JiUi»ino, Purple Clover, and several varieties of Vetch are everywhere growing wild as large and strong as any I have seen cultivated in other places. " Order 23. liosacecr, I^oseworts. Species of this order are also very numerous : in tho s])ring every plain is covered with tho Wild liose and 8weet Brier : in the sub-order are ^^'ild Apples, tho Mountain Ash (scarce), the Service Tree, Bird Cherry or Cluster Cherry. " Order 28. Grossuhmacea', (^urrantworts. "Wherever the ground is clear abound Currant and GoosebeiTy bushes of endless varieties ; tho Flowering Currant, Kibes sanguinea, is a beautiful object in the 'bush.' " Order 30. Ajiiacecc, X'^mbcllifers, tho Conium. " „ 32. Coi'iiaceie, Cornels. The Dogwood tree is very common, and makes a handsome object for the shrubbery. Jn this order is tho ' Jia Brouc ' plant of the Canadian voyageins : it bears a small red berry which is dried and stored for use. Mixed in small portions with a little water it is after standing whisked up Avith branches ; it gradually expands and becomes con- verted into a substance resembling ' trifle,' which is eaten with BUgar sifted over it. " Order 33. Caprifoliacecc, Caprifoils. Two vai'ieties of Elder tree very common. Order 38. Campanidaceoc, Bellworts. The Campanula. , Si). Enviwece, IleatliAvorts. In a Sub-order are the CranbeiTies. These shrubs abound everywhere, and yield a most delicious beny ; there are many varieties — from one, the Oxycoccus palustris, I have known of 100 barrels being collected. Chap. XI FT. SKF/rcII OF NATURAL HISTORY. 421 the produce of ,r Tshoid, " Julj; 18G2.*' It would bo useless for general purposes to give a mass of statistics with regard to tho climate of British Columbia and Vancouver Island. In a country endjracing so many Imndred miles of latitude there is of course great diO'erence of tempe- rature. The climate of Vancouver Island may be said gene- rally to be about the same as that of tho south of England. During tho last winter, lSGl-2, it has been unusually severe. In the four winters that I passed at Esquimalt Harbour wo had a great deal of rain, very littlo snow, while the ice on tho ponds bore skaters for about a fortnight each year, the thermometer being hardly ever below 25° Fahr. Tho south part of Ih-itish Columbia is, perhaps, a littlo colder. This winter the Lower Fraser has been frozen over so as entirely to impede navigation; but I believe this has never been known before, and it certainly has only occurred once since 1856. Steamers were able to go to Langley every winter I was in tho country, and were only prevented ascending to Fort Hope by the shallowness of tho stream. It will also ( JIAI'. XIU. CI.LMA'IE. 423 l)») loinoinbcrod tliivt I aHceiKletl tho rivc-r to Fort Yale in Febrimry, 1859, witlioiit lioiii^ Kin-iously im[)i'«lo(l by ico. 'J'lio full of siiow uvuii during' tlio lato extraordinarily sovoro wint.'r appears to liavo lioeii very partial. I'ho thcnnoiiietor at Wt'>tiniiist(;r stood at 8\ 1(/^ aud 12^ below zero, and 17° or 18'' at Forts Ilopo and Yale. The deep biiow at tlieso latter places, however, made them less C(dd than at Lilloett, where there was oidy an inch or two of snow, and where tho C(dd is described as lanin<^ been intensely severe. Further north, at Cariboo, the winter of 18()0-1 was even more severely felt. On the ni^'ht of tho Ist of ]>ecend)er the mercury of the thermometer coujujealcd, and on the 2i')\\i and 2'ith of Januarv it is said to have stilii'ened I>eforo sun- down, with the sun shiiung full u[»on it. Two thcrmometei'S at William Lake are reported in tho Yictoria pa})ers to have burst from tho eftects of the cold, and many instances of severe frost-bites, &c., are given. In judging of the severity of the season from the reports of the miners, howover, it must be remembered that their clothing and habitations would ill fit them to endure "with patience the hardships of an ordinary winter even in England. In a recent book on IJritish Columbia one of tho many objections u)'g«Kl against the country is said to arise from tho danger of Indian aggression upon the colonists. I cannot conclude these remarks without giving this assertion an emphatic contradictiijn. ]\[y own experience — as the reader will have gathered — has led me to form an exactly opposite opinion of the temper and disposition of the Indians ; and lest it should bo thought that my ollicial position gave me when tra- velling (dona among them a protection which would be wanting to tho ordinary colonist, I give the following quotation upon the subject from the letter of a young English clerg)'man whom I have lately had the pleasure of meeting. I withhold his name only because his letter was not intended for that public use which I venture to make of it. I should add that k ^J ^> .%. >^^ •*.«^. m 7 em J^i >>* M vV^ IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-S) 1.0 I.I ■flii^ IIM ■^ 1^ III 2.2 !!: 1^ 12.0 1.25 1.4 1.6 y Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 ill It 111 424 CLIMATE. Chap. XIIF. the writer liad never visited an Englisli colony until he went to British Columbia four years ago: — " j\[y experience leads mo to say, what I find most persons confirm, that, so far as safety is concerned, there is far less risk in travelling in British Cohiml>ia than in many parts of England. Nothing can exceed the order of the country, and the marked absence of serious crime either on the part of the whites or Indians." This was written after a journey of more than 500 miles in the interior, alone or with some fellow-clergymen. Those who desire further evidence of the kindly disposition of the Indians will find it abimdantly in the extracts of the Bi,slio})'s Journal, published by tlie Columbian i\[issionary Society. I have more than once spoken of Esquimalt as being admirably adapted for a naval station and dockyard. I wish to add that, important as this is for our squadron in tlie Pacific, I think it would be still more so for the squadron in the Chinese waters. Our ships there, which are sometimes almost disabled by sickness, could reach the healthy climate of Vancouver in six weeks, and might, if required, be relieved by vessels from the Pacific squadron. In 1859 the 'Tribune' and ' Pylades ' were ordered across from China ; they arrived at Esquimalt with crews greatly debilitated, and all hands a good deal below ])ar. They remained about a year there, and left, I believe, with the crews of both ships in perfect health. I may also mention that the healthy appearance of our crew was a] subject of general remark to all ships arriving on the station. The climate is said to be unfavourable for people who have previously^ been subject to rheumatism. The officers and men of the 'Plumper,' however, who lived constantly in camp, and were much exposed, never suffered seriously from this complaint. In concluding this rough summary of the resources of the colouios, let me repeat, that in our North American posses- Chap. XIII. rnosPECTs for the settle ii. -12.") sions we have, iiulopcndeiitly of its niiiifnil wealth, a country of immense extent and natural beauty, of — so far as it lias been tested — invariable fertility, and with a climate closely resembling our own. Against these advantages, however, it must be remembered that all that is required to develop and utilise the many natural advantages of the colonics has yet to be done, and that for many years to come stout he[irts and strong liands will find abundant occupation in accomi)lishing this work. He who is not possessed of these requisites of a bush-life is as unfit for IJritish Columbia as for any other colony. But the man whose heart does not fail him at the prospect of liard living and harder work, will find there welcome and plenty awaiting him. '■ ( I'^i :t" ..< \m 420 yUlTLY OF WATEK. t'MAl\ XIV. CHAPTER XIV. Blinoval wcnllh of Britisli Cnlum1)in, Summnrj' of — Cuiiclusiou, I HAVE left" myself but small space or time to si)oak of lluil Avhic'li is undoubtedly the mainsi)ring of IJritish Columbia — its immense and apparently inexhaustible yield of gold. At starting-, however, a few remarks upon the various methods of working mining-claims at the gold-fields may bo found of interest to the general read(,T. As a rule, picking up gold is a mere delusive figure of speech. It has to be dug and worked for hardly, with primitive appliances often ; sometimes with all the resources of modern mechanism. Uefore attempting to describe shortly the various processes of extracting the precious mineral, I may say that they all require the aid of water and, with rare exceptions, quicksilver. It is the abundant natural supply of water that gives British Columbia so great an advantage over California. The country is, as I have before said, and as a glance at the map will show, intersected in every direc- tion by streams and rivers, while lakes of various size abound, the majority of which may be easily adapted to the purposes of mining. The very height of the hills also, which may be in other respects a disadvantage, proves in this case of use to the miner who can divert to his purpose the torrents which com'se down their sides. In California the want of water has been much felt, and the methods resorted to for meeting it illustrate as much as anything else in that marvellous country the enterprise and spirit of the American settler. In Grass Valley, Nevada county, one of the richest quartz districts in Cahfornia, which I visited in 18G0, and where 40 steam-mills Chap. XIV. " PROSPF.CTING." -127 were tlien at work, every drop of water used liad to bo brought by " fliunes," from a distance of more than 40 miles ! Qnioksilver has as yet ahvays been found to exist in gohl countries. California is abundantly supplied. It lias been discovered in several places in Columbia ; but as yet it has been found cheaper to procure it from California than to work it tliere. In 18G0 I made the tour of some of tlio richest diggings in California, with the view of seeing the various appliances in use there. In describing: these various methods of gold working, I shall have to speak of several not yet in use in Columbia ; some of them, indeed, being but newly introduced into California. The first task of the miner attracted to a new gold country or district, by the report of its wealth, is "prospecting." For this purpose every miner, however light his equii)ment may otherwise be, carries with him a "pan" and a small quantity of quicksilver; the latter to be used only where the gold is very fine. Very little experience enables a miner to detect that " colour " of the earth which indicates the presence of the metallic sand iu which gold is found. Wherever, as he ti'avels through the new country, he sees this, he stops at onco to wash a pan of dirt, and thus test its value. Although many diggings are found away from tlie banlc of a stream, the river-sides are the places where gold is generally first looked for and worked. In saying this, of course I 'except the gold in quartz, of which I shall have to speak hereafter. The spots first searched are generally those upon the bank of a river where the deposit consists of a thick, stiff mud or clay, with stones. In some cases this is covered with sand, so that the surface has to be removed before the " pay dust " is revealed. All these workhigs on river-banks are called " bars," and are usually named after the prospecter, or from some incident connected with their discovery. 'is.*' ^1 lif li i> ' 428 TESTING. Cjiap. XIV Wlion tlio Prospretor comes to dirt wliicli looks as if it would pay, lio unsliiif^s liis pan from his buck, and ja-oooods to test it. This lie effects by filling his pan with the earth, then S(piattin'> ii 5,'' " 10," or "15 cent dirt," meaning that each pan so washed will yield so much in money. Panning, it may be rennirked, never gives the full value of the dirt, as may be imagined from the roughness of the process. If the gold should be in flakes, a good deal is likely to be lost in the process, as it will not then sink readily to the bottom of the pan, and is more likely to be washed away with *lie sand. In panning, as well as, indeed, in all the other primitive processes of washing gold, the superior specific gravity of this metal over others, except platinum, is the basis of operations ; all depend- CiiAP. XIV. •'llOCKErt" oil "CKADLE." 420 inrf upon its settling at the bottom of whatever vessel may chance to be usfxl. The " pan " is hardly over nsod except for pros[)ectinii:, so that the " rocker " or '• cradle " may be described as tlu^ most primitive appliance used in gold- washing. In the winter of 1859, when I first went up the Fraser, the rocker was the general machine — the use of sluices not having then begun. It was used in California as early as 1818, being formed rudely of logs, or the trunk of a tree. And yet, ungaiidy as they were, they comnuuuh.'d, before saw-mills were established in the country, enormous prices. The rocker, then, consists of a box 8^- to 4 f(>et h^ng, about 2 feet wide, and \i deep. The top and one end of this l)ox are open, and at the lower end the sides slope gradually until they reach the bottom. At its head is attached a closely-jointed box with a sheet-iron bottom, pierced with holes sulliciently large to allow pebbles to pass through. This machine is provided with rockers like a child's cradle, while Avithin elects are placed to arrest the gold in its passage. One of the miners then, the cradle being placed by the water's edge, feeds it with earth, while another rocks and supplies it with water. The dirt to be washed is thrown into the ui>per iron box, and a continual stream of water being- poured in, it is disintegrated, the gold and jiebbles passing down to the bottom, where the water is allowed to carry the stones away, and the elects arrest the precious metal. When the gold is very fine I have seen a piece of cloth laid along the bottom box, covered with quicksilver to arrest the gold. AVlien a party of miners work with rockers, they divide the labour of rocking, carrying water, if necessary, and digging equally among themselves. The rocker is the only apparatus that can be at all successfully worked single- handed ; and rough as it appears and really is, I have seen men make 30 to 50 dollars a day with it, while far greater I I I m I' ' •i iH 'It]" «■' Id it i>% 1*, 1 :!g, y m ' )« 430 THE "LONG TOM." Chap. XIV. sums liavo boon known to be realized by it. In tlieso remarks I have assumed tliat my readers generally are aw.'ire that quicksilver arresta whatever gold passes over it, and, forming an amalgam with it, retains it until it is retorted from it. In washing gold, quicksilver has to bo used always, except where the mineral is found veiy largo and coars(\ Even then the earth is generally made to pass over some quicksilver before it escapes altogether, in order to j)reserve the finer particles. I may hero mention that in a " sluice " of ordinary size 40 or 50 lbs. of quicksilver arc used daily ; in a rocker perhaps 8 or 10 lbs. Of course the same quick- silver can be used over and over again when the gold has been retorted from it. The first improvement on the " Eocker " was by the use of a machine called the " Long Tom." Tliis, though common enough in California, I never saw used in British Columbia. It consists of a shallow trough, from 10 to 20 feet long, and 16 inches to 2 feet wide. One end is slightly turned up, shod with iron, and perforated like the sieve of a rocker. The trough is placed at an incline, sieve-end downwards. A stream of water is turned into the upper end of the Tom, and several hands supply it with earth, which finds its way to the sieve, carrying along with it the gold, which it washes or disintegrates in its passage. Immediately beneath the sieve a box is placed, in which are nailed elects, or as they are more generally termed " Eiffles," which catch the gold as in the rocker. When the gold is fine another box containing quicksilver is placed at the end of the riffle, to catch the gold which passes it. A man always attends at the end to clear away the " Tail- ings," or earth discharged from the machine, and also to stir up the earth in the I'om, and keep the sieve clear of stones.. an iron rake being used for the purpose. By the use of the "Long Tom," rather than the cradle, a great saving is effected ; the work being performed in a much more thorough CiiAP. XIV. " SLUICING." 'i;u manner. It is ostimatod in C'aliforuia that the Tom will ^vash ton times as much earth as a cradle, employing tlio same nnmbor of hands. The next important method is " Sluieinji;." This is by far the most commonly used both in Britisli Columbia and Cali- fornia. employing, I suppose, one-half the mining jjopulation of both countries. Sluicing is, moreover, an operation which can bo carried on on any scale, from two or three men upon a river bar, to a rich comi)any washing away an entire hill by the "Hydrau- lic" process. Whatever may be the scale of the operations, however, " sluicing " is necessarily connected with a system of " flumes," or Mooden aqueducts of greater or less extent, either running along the back of a river-bar, and supplying the sluices at it, or cobwebbing and intersecting the whole country as in California. I have seen flumes on the Shady Creek Canal there, conveying an enormous stream of water across a deep ravine at the height of 100 to 200 feet. " Sluice-boxes " are of various sizes, but generally fi'om 2 to 3 feet long, by about the same Avidtli. These are litted closely together at the ends, so as to form a continuous strongly- built trough of the required length, from 15 or 20 to several thousand feet, their make and strength depending entirely upon the work they have to do. I will here describe sluicing upon a moderate scale, as I found it in practice at Hill's Bar upon the Frascr during my visit there in 1858. This bar was taken up in claims early in 1858, ■ size being then about 1|- mile, although it has since been much extended, the richness of the soil proving, I believe, greater as it is ascended. In this place, then, a flume was put up, carrying the water from a stream which descended the mountain at its southern end along the whole length of the bar, and behind those claims ^^■hich were being worked. From this flume each miner led a sluice down towards the river ; his sluice being placed at such an angle that the water ii Hn ,. t I ii' i1 "FLUMES. CiiAr. XIV. mf 11 |ir-; m HI i \'-'h MM ■r: lli 1 jH'IJ! i''tii 11 i ^ i i would run thvonjj;li it witli KulTi('i(^nt force to carry tlio oartli, Imt not, of course, tlio gokl witli it. Its strongtli, indeed, is so ro<;ulate(l as to jdlow time for tlio rilHcs and quicksilver to catch the gold as it passes. The supply of >vater from the Hume to each sluice is regulated by a gate in the side of the flume, which is raised for so much per inch. The price paid for water of course varies greatly with the cost of tind)er, engineering ditllculties of making the flnmo, &c. It is ordinarily established by the miners, who meet and agree to pay any individual or company who may undertake the work a certain rateable rental for the water. Their con- struction, indeed, is one of the most profitable of colonial speculations. The flume I am now speaking of cost 7000 or 8000 dollars, and each miner paid a dollar an inch for water daily. Since that time it has become much cheai)er, and the usual price is about 25 cents (Is.) an inch, tlie width of the gate being 1 foot. The sluice-boxes here were very slight, about inch-plank, as the dirt which had to pass through them was not large. In the bottom of each box was a grating, made of strips of plank nailed crosswise to each other, but not attached to the box like the riffles. In the interstices of these gratings quicksilver is spread to catch the fine gold, the coarse being caught by the grating itself. The sluice is placed on tressels or legs, so as to raise it to i\m lieiglit convenient for shovelling the earth in ; the water is then let on, and several men feed the sluice with earth from either side, while one or two Avith iron rakes stir it uj) or pull out any large stones which might break the gratings. Such is the working of ordinary sluices ; but sluicing is also inseparable from the gi-andest of all mining operations — viz., " Hydraulic Mining." Hydraulic mining, as I witnessed it at Timbuctoo in California, is certainly a marvellous operation. A hill of moderate size, 200 to 300 feet high, may often be found to contain gold throughout its formation, but too thinly to repay cradle-washing, or even hand-sluicing, and not lying Chap. XIV. tlio oartli, idood, is 8o cksilvcr to I' from tlio iitlc of tlio price paid of timber, re. It i.s and agree n-talvo the riieir coii- Df colonial St 7000 or I for Avater 3ai)cr, and e width of Avere very ss through )ox was a 3 to each In the catch the self. The it to the e water is arth from lip or pull iug is also ons — viz., }ssed it at operation. ' often be too thinly not lying Cjiap. XIV. HVDnAUUC MINING. 4aa in any veins or streaks which cnild be worked bv luuiiclliii<' or ground-sluicing. A series of shiire-boxes are therefore constructed and put together, as described above; but in this case, instead of being of light timber, they are made of the stoutest board that can })ossibly b(> gut, backed by cross-jiieces, tl'c., so as to be of sullicient strength to allow the passage of anv amount of earth and stones forced through them by a flood of Mat(»r. The b(jxes are also mado sliorter and \sider, bein<; y:enerallv about lA inches long by .'> to 4 feet wide — the bottoms, instead of the gratings spoken of above, being lined with wooden blocks like wood-pavement, for resisting tlu* Iriction of the dt'bns i)assing over it, the interstices being filled with cpiicksilver to catch the fine gold. The sluice, thus prepared, is firmly placed in a slanting position near the foot of the hill intended to be attacked. To shovel a mass of several million tons of earth into these sluices would prove a tedious and profith^ss operation. In its stead, therefore, hydraulic mining is called into play, by which the labour of many men is performed by water, and the hill worn down to the base by its agency. The operation consists of sim})ly throwing an immense stream of water npon the side of the hill with hose and pipe, as a fire-engine plays upon a burning building. The water is led through gutta- percha or canvas hoses, 4 to G inches in diameter, and is thrown from a considerable height above tl.>,e scene of opera- tions. It is consequently hurled with such force as to eat into the hill-side as if it were sugar. At the spot where I saw this working in operation to the greatest advantage they were using four horses, which they estimated as equal to the power of a hundred men wi^^h pick and shovel. There is more knowledge and skill required in this work than would at first sight be supposed necessary. The purpose of the man who directs the hese is to undermine the surface as well as wash awav the face of the hill. Ke therefore directs the 2f iMl «■ ! \\: if r I it!;}' 434 i:xrENSE OF WATEll SUPPLY. Chap. XIV. wator at a lilolyspot until indicntionsof a "oavo-iii" Ixcomo aj)|turc'nt. Notico Ix'iiij^ given, tlio iici^'liliourliood is de- serted. Tlie cartli far above eraeks, and down eonios all the f'aee of the proeipice with tlu^ noise of an avalanche. ])y this ni(wis a hill several hinidred feet hi" par- taking in a measure of both. This is called "ground- sluicing," and is quite distinct from "sluicing." The reader will better understand this process if I speak of " koyote-ing," and " ground-sluicing " together, the latter having become a substitute for the former. As the miners in California began to gain experience in gold-seeking, they found that at a certain distance beneath the surface of the earth a layer of rock existed, on which the gold, by its superior specific gravity, had gradually settled. Experience soon taught the miner to discard the upper earth, which was comparatively valueless, and to seek for gold in the cracks or "pockets" of this bed-rock, or in the layer of earth or clay covering it. The depth of this rock is very various ; sometimes it crops out at the surface, while at other times it is found 150 to 200 feet down. Where it is very deep, recourse must be had to regular shaft-sinking and tunnelling, as in a coal or copper mine ; but when the 2 f2 i Si": liH 4:^() " KOYOTE" TUNXELLINCJ. Chap. XIV. rock is only 20 or 30 feet bcnoatli the surface, tunnelling on a very small scale, known as " koyote-ing," from its fancied resemblance to the burrowing of the small wild-dog common to Britisli Columbia and California, is adopted. Those little tunnels are made to save the expense of shovelling off the 20 or 30 feet of earth that cover the " pay dirt " on tlie bed- rock, and their extraordinary numl)er gives a Aery strange appearance to those parts of the country which have- been thoroughly "koyote-ed." I have seen a hill completely honeycombed with these burrows, carried through and through it, and interlacing in every pos-ible direction. So rich is their formation, however, that after they have been deserted by the koyote-ers tliey are still found worth working. I remember looking at one in the Yuba county in California which appeared so completely riddled that the pressure of a child's foot would have brought it down. Upon my expres- sing my conviction that anyhoAV that seemed worked out, a miner standing by at once corrected me. '• Worked out, sir ?" he said — " not a bit of it ! If you come in six months, you'll not see any hill tliere at all, sir. x\ company iive going to bring the water to play upon it in a few days." '*' ^Yill it pay weW, do you suppose?" "All pays about here,. sir," Avas the quick reply ; " they'll take a hundied dollars each a-day." The Ivoyot« tunnels are only made sufficiently high for the workman to sit upright in them. They are generally carried through somewhat stifiish clay, and are propped and supported with wooden posts, butj as may be imagined in the case of such small apertures extending for so great a length as some of them do, they are very unsafe. Not unfrequently they " cave in " without the slightest warning. Sometimes, too, the earth settles down upon the bed-rock so slowly and silently, that the poor victims are buried alive unknown to their companions without. The danger of this work and its inefficiency for extracting CiiAP. XIV. nnelling on its foncied of^ conimon Those little Hug off the 311 tlio bed- erv stran^fo have been completely rough and ection. So have been til working. I California ossure of a my expres- ked out, a d out, sir?" nths, you'll e going to MVill it B,.sir," was liars each igh for the lly carried supported le case of h as some mtly they times, too, owly and iknown to extracting Chap. XIV MINING IX 111VE1M5EDS. 437 the gold, much of which was lost in these dark holes, gave rise, as the agency of water berain(» more appreciated, to " ground-sluicing." This consists in directing a heavy stream of water upon tlie bank which is to be removed, and, with the aid of pick and shovel, washing the natural surface away and bringing the " pay-streak " next the bed-rock into view. Before proceeding to the subject of quartz-crushing, it will be well })erhaps to give the reader 'some further idea of the great extent ol' those mining o})erations which, begun by a lew adventurei's, have become a regularly organised system, carried on by wealthy and powerful companies. As a striking monu- ment of their courage and the extent of their resources, I would instance the fact of their having divei-ted large rivers from their channels so as to lay their beds dry for mining purj)oses. This has been done at nearly every bend or shallow in the numerous streams of California, and will doubtless be imitated in Columbia ere long. The largest of these oj)erations that I ever saw was near Auburn, a large town in Placer county, on the American river. Sometimes the water can be broupjht in a strona-lv-built flume from above, and carried by a long box over the old bed of the river ; at other times a reguUir canal has to be made and dams constructed uj)on a very large scale. The result is that the bed of the river is laid drv, when its everv crevice and pock(.'t is carefully searched for the gold which the water has cenerallv broujiht down from the bases of the hills and the bars liiglier up the stream. These operations are frequently so extensive as to occupy several successive seasons before the whole is worked, and to employ hundreds of labourers besides the individuals composing the comi)any, who usually in such an enterprise number fifty or sixty. Sometimes the prema- ture approach of the rainy season, and consequent freshets, carry away the whole of the works in a night. These works occasionally yield immense returns, and it is not unfrequently found, on renewing' them alter the rainy season, that fresh p 438 UNCERTAINTY OF PROCEEDS. Chap. XI V- deposits of gold have taken place, almost equal in value to the first. On the other hand, no amount of judgment can select with any degree of certainty a favourable spot for "jamming" or turning a river, and, after months of hard labour, the bed when laid bare may prove entirely destitute of gold deposits. The long space of still water below a scries of rapids Avill sometimes be found in one spot to contain pounds of gold, while in another the workers who have selected that portion of the river above the rapids will find themselves in the paying place. All gold operations, indeed, depend very much upon chance for success. No one can ever calculate with any degree of certainty on the run of the " lode " underground, or in the "pay streak" near the surface. Thus it is ever a lottery. As an instance of this on a larire scale, I remember when I Avas at Grass Valley, " Nevada county," going to see the working at the " Black Bridge " tunnel there. The first shaft for this tunnel was sunk five years before my visit, and up to that time nothing liad been taken, tliough it had been con- stantly worked and was nearly 20,000 feet long. It was commenced in 1855 by a company, who sunk a shaft nearly 250 feet, to strike, as they hoped and expected, a lode from the opposite sido of the valley. The original company con- sisted of five men, and in the course of the five years some of them gave up and others joined, part of them working at other diggings to get money for provisions, tools, &c., to keep their firm going. At length, just before my visit, all the original projectors, and about three sets of others who had joined at different periods, gave the enterprise up as hopeless after carrying it, as I have said, nearly four miles. A new company then took possession of it and summoned the miners of the valley to a consultation. The meeting decided that they had not gone deep enougli, and the shaft was accordingly sunk 50 feet lower, when the gold was at once struck. I tried to ascertain what had been expended upon this tunnel, but it JlIAP, XIV. Chap. XIV. FREAKS OF FOIITUKE. 439 I value to Tient can spot for of hard destitute V a series contain selected lemselves n chance degree of )r in the I lottery. r when I see the irst shaft ind up to jeen con- It was ft nearly ode from •any con- I some of at other 3ep their original joined at >ss after company s of the they had ?ly sunk tried to 1, but it had passed through so many hands that it was impossible even to estimate it. 1'he gentleman who showed me over it, and who was an Englishman and the principal man of Grass Valley (Mr. Attwood), said it would cost the new company 12,000 or 14,000 dollars (3000/.) before they took out any thing that would repay them. The recklessness with which money is risked and the apparent unconcern with which a man loses a large fortune, and the millionaire of to-day becomes a hired labourer to-morrow, is one of the most striking characteristics of the American in these Western slates. It is owing in a great degree to the mere accident which gold- working is. The effect of this upon society is of course most injurious. The poor miner, hobbling along the street of San Francisco or Sacramento trying to borrow — for there are no beggars in California — money enough to take him back to the mines from which ague or rheumatism have driven him a few months before, knows that a lucky hit may enable him in a very short time to take the place of the gentleman who passes by him in his carriage, and whose capital is very probably floating about in schemes, the failure of which will as rapidly reduce him to the streets, or send him back again to the mines as a labourer. The spirit, too, with which these changes of fortune are borne is wonderful. I travelled once in California with a man who was on his way to the mines to commence work as a labourer for the third time. He told me his story readily : it was simple enough. He had twice made what he thought would enrich him for life, and twice it had gone in unlucky speculations. An Englishman under these circumstances would probably have been greatly depressed: not so my fellow-traveller. He talked away through the journey cheer- fully, describing the country as we passed through it, speaking of the past without anything like regret, and calmly hopeful for the future. To return to the gold-working, however. I have described the various processes of extracting it from the earth or the 1,1 : '"I i ' U m t?-i h- f' h Wi ijfljiti ii'! uo QUAirj'Z-ClU'SHIN(i. Chap. XIV. rock-surface. I come now lastly to the more arduous work of collectin<^ it from the rock itself, known as quartz-crushing. Some very rich specimens of quartz have been found in British Columl)ia, near Lowliee Creek, Cariboo, and in other places. Jhit while the surface-dig-gings continue to yield such rich returns and transport is so dear, it can scarcely be expected that quartz-crushing, which requires the use of pondeious machinery, will be commenced. The richest quartz district in California is Grass Valley, in Nevada county, which place, as I have before observed, I visited in 18G0. In this valley there are forty steam-mills at work, drawing the earth from tunnels, crushing quartz, &c. The average value of tlie quartz there is GO or 70 dollars a ton, though it some- times runs as high as 200 dollars per ton. The Helvetia mill, which is one of the best, crushes on an average 30 tons daily, making therefore nearly 2000 dollars (400?.). The quartz is picked or blasted out in the usual way, and then conveyed on mules or by tramway to the mill, where it is broken by hand into pieces about the size of an egg. The machinery is placed under a large shed or wooden building of some kind. It consists of a series of heavy stampers, made of iron, or wood shod with iron, the lower ends of which lit into boxes in which the quartz is placed. The stampers are moved by cogs connected with a revolving wheel, which lifts them and lets them fall into the boxes. The Helvetia mill works thirty-four of these stampers. The Btamping-boxes are supplied with water by a hose or pipe on one side, while at the other side is a hole through which the quartz, as it is crushed, passes out in the form of a thick white fluid. As it comes out it is received upon a framework, placed at such an angle that it passes slowly over it : on this frame are several quicksilver riffles, which catch and amal- gamate the gold as it glides along. Beyond this again is another frame, over which is spread a blanket, which arrests any line particles which escape the quicksilver. Even with CifAp. XIV. nous work s-crusliing. found in I in oflier yield sucli arcely be »o use of ricliest ti county, 18G0. In wing tlie igo value it some- Jfelvetia 30 tons I). The md then ere it is ' wooden )f heavy le lower i placed, ivolvinfif e boxes. s. The pipe on lich the ii thick lework, on this amal- ^ain is arrests n with Chap. XiV. " RASTRA," OR DRAG. 441 all this care there is considerable waste, and the " tailings " or refuse is generally worth a second Avashing, No way has yet been found of obviating this waste. There is a more primitive method of quartz-crushing called the "rastra," or drag, which, though it will only crush about a ton a day, does its work more perfectly than the stanijjor.s. For this purpose a circular trough is made, and paved at the bottom. In the centre of this an upright post is fixed, with a spindle fitted into a frame at the top, so that it can be turned round. Through the lower part of this a horizontal pole is passed, one end of which plumbs the edge of the trough, while the other projects some way beyond it. To the short end a couple of heavy stones are attached ; a mule or horse being harnessed to the other. The quartz is then put into the trough, being first broken up small, and ground by the friction of the stones, which are dragged round by the mule. A small stream of water is kept constantly flowing into the trough, and quicksilver is sprinkled in at intervals to amalgamate with the gold. After a certain time the water is turned oft', the entire pavement of the trough taken up, and the amalgam carefully collected and retorted. Of course these are worked chiefly by parties who do not possess sufficient capital to construct steam-mills. With respect to the existence of the precious mineral in North America, the theory which Sir Roderick Murchisou maintains is that the matrix will be found extending the whole way along the slopes of the chain of mountains lying between the Rocky Mountains and the Coast Ridge. This theory is borne out by the discoveries in Rock Creek and Cariboo, which lie in the line attributed to it. All the river bars or " placers," as surface-diggings are called, which have been worked as yet are undeniably the alluvial deposits brought down by the streams on whose banks they are found. And nearly all these rivers take their rise in the chain of mountains spoken of, which form an almost unbroken line t: Pa J: ifei. ii'i ill I hi :ii# i mimmmmmi»^ 442 ESTIMATE OF YIELD. Chap. XIV. between Hock Creek and Cariboo. ITie Cariboo Lake and some of the rich Cariboo diggings, as Keithley's Creek, Cottonwood Eiver, &c'., are on the west side of this ridge ; wliile Antler Creek, Caiion Creek, and others lie on the east, showing that the gold is common to both slopes. This has probably tended to make the Fraser lliver bars much richer than they otherwise would have been, as all the small streams which rise on the eastern side of these mountains also run into the Fraser, which comes up from the southward behind them, till, as I have before shown, it is turned southward by the height of the land between it and the Peace liiver. The few adventurers who have crossed this barrier to the Peace lliver report all the appearances of an extremely rich auriferous region there ; and Mr. Nind tells me that it is generally believed at Cariboo that the richest diggings will be found in that direction. This fact undoubtedly confirms Sir II. Murchison's theory, as the Peace lliver Valley stretches northward in the same direction till it meets the Finlay lliver in lat. 56F N. It would be simply waste of space to quote the accounts of the richness of the gold-fields of British Columbia, given at intervals in the journals of the day. New and more startling discoveries are being so constantly made, that the marvels of one day are always likely to be eclipsed by the still more extraordinary reports of the next. We have also yet to re- ceive the accounts of this summer's work at the gold-fields. I will give, however, from the Times of February 0, 18G2, the estimate which its correspondent forms of the approximate gross yield of gold for 1861 : — " It is impossible to give a return of the * yield ' of gold produced by British Columbia in the aggregate with certainty. I shall merely attempt an approximation of the gross yield from the best data within my reach. "It is generally conceded that, including Chinese, there ■were 5000 men engaged in gold-digging this year. The Chap. XIV. Lake and 's Creek, lis ridge; I the east, This lias ich riclier 1 streams also run ■d behind iward by er. >r to the nely rich hat it is ings will confirms stretches ay Kiver accounts given at startling irvels of II more t to re- elds. I m, the jximate of gold rtainty. s yield , there The Chap. XIV. ESTIMATE OF YIELD. 443 various Government returns of Customs' duties and of interior tolls on roads charged on the passage of merchandise collected, justify this assumption, while the miners' licences issued tend to corroborate it. The raining population in the Cariboo country, including within this division the Forks of Quesnelle River (50 miles below) is put down on general testimony (of miners, travellers, other residents, and Government re- turns) at 1500 men. To work out the earnings of this aggre- gate of 5000 miners, I adopt a statement of names and amounts, made up from miners' information, of 79 men who together took out in Cariboo 926,080 dollars. The general opinion of the miners is, that (in addition to the ' lucky ones * who made ' big strikes,' and which I limit to the above number of 79) every man who had a claim or a share in a claim made from 1000 to 2000 dollars. Of these there were at the least 400, and taking tlieir earnings at a medium or average between the two suras mentioned — say at 1500 dollars to each — ^tliey would produce 600,000 dollars. There remain 1021 men to be accounted for. Putting their earnings at 7 dollars a day each, which is the lowest rate of wages paid for hired labour in the Caiyboo mines, and assigning only 107 working days as the period of their mining operations during the season, to make allowance for its shortness by reason of the distance from the different points of departure and of bad weather, they would have taken out 764,729 dollars. These several sums added would make the yield of Cariboo and Quesnelle 2,291,409 dollars to 1500 men for the season, by far the greater portion, or nearly all, in fact, being from Cariboo ; although the north fork of Quesnelle is also very productive and so rich as to induce its being worked by fluraing this winter by about 100 miners, who have remained for the purpose. " The remaining 3500 of the mining population who worked on Thompson's Eiver, the Eraser, from Fort George down- wards ; Bridge River, Semilkameen, and Okanagan (very few), m iir :4: 444 ESTIMATE OF YIELD. CuAi'. XIV. Itock Crook, and all otlicr loealities tlirougliout tho country, I shall divide into two classes : tlio first to consist of 1500, who made 10 dollars a-day for — say 180 days (Sundays thrown off), and which Avould privc 2,700,000 dollars for their joint earnings ; tho second and last class of 2000 men, who were not so lucky, I sliall assume to have made only 5 dollars each a-day for tho same period, and which would give 1,800,000 dollars as the fniit of their united labour. '''J ho three last categories, which number 4521 men, inc^ ^0 tho many miners who in Cariboo were making 20 to 50 (liars a-day each, as well as those who, in various other localities, were making Irom 15 dollars to 100 dollars a-day occasionally, so I think my estimate, although not accurate, is reasonabhj and moderate. The Government people think I have rather understated the earnings of the miners in these three classes of 4521 men ; and the Governor himself, who takes an absorbing interest in the affairs of this portion of his government, and to whose ready courtesy I am indebted for some of the information given in this letter, as well as for much formerly communicated in my correspondence, thinks my estimate is a very safe one. ♦ " But I must finish this long letter with a recaj)itulation, for I dread the inroads I have made upon your space : — Dollars. 79 miners took out an aggregate of 920,(580 400 ditto, claim owners, took out 600,000 1021 ditto, at 7 dollars a-ilay, in 107 days 704,729 Total yield (nearly all) from CariLoo .. 2,291,409 1500 miners who worked in otlier places i^oitare. for ISO days, at 10 dollars fer diem 2,700,000 2000 ditto, at 5 dollars 1,800,000 4,500,000 5000 miners— gross yield for l«6l 6,791,409 " This does not include the native Indians, as I have no means of estimating their earnings. They are beginning to Chap. XIV. ESTIMATE OF YIELD. 415 ' dig,' in imitation of tlio wliite men, in somo parts, and will ovontnally iiicroaso tlio yield of gold, as the desire for wealth grows npon them. As a proof of their ai)titude and success in this, to them, new field of labour, I may mention that the Bishop of Columbia found a gang of them ' washing ' on Bridge River last sunmier, and that he had the day's earnings of one Indian weighed when ho ceased his labours, and found it to contiiin one ounce of gold. His Lordshij) purchased it of him, paying him IC dollars 50 cents, the current issue, and carried it away as a souvenir.^^ The return of the assays of Cariboo gohl, given by the same gentleman, are also of permanent interest, as showing the value of the dust. The highest assayed by ^Messrs. ]\[archand and Co., from whom the return is obtained, from Davis Creek, was 718 fine, value per ounce 18 dolL 07*04 c, or about 3^. 19s. The lowest, which came from Williams Creek, was 810 fine, value per ounce 10 doll. 74"12 c. (about 31. ds. Id.). The average value of all Cariboo dust is 854 fine, value per ounce 17 doll. 05'37 c. {ol. 13s. Qd.). In conclusion, I have merely to add, that I remained with the ' Hecate ' at San Francisco until she was repaired, when, on the 21st October, 1801, I left that place in the United States mail steamer 'Orizaba,' and on the 27th November arrived " home." 1 1' "•IN I 'i5 fill I, ni I'lif'i !!«;: '% ¥ n 1^ ^ ( 447 ) atmm:ndix. -•<*- EXPLORATIONS IN JEIIVIS INLET AND DESOLATION SOUND, IJIUTISH COLUMBIA. Mr. William Dowkie to Governor James Douglas. Sir, Victoria, Vancouver Island, March 19th, 1859. I have the honour to inform your Excellency of ruy return to Victoria, after a sojourn of sixteen weeks in British Columbia. I have been for the last nionth in Desolation Sound. 1'hc snow and rain set in so as to make it imiiossiblo to start over the mountains from the head of Jervis Inlet to the Upper Eraser liiver for some time. I then thou<,dit it would be as well to visit the Klahous country, as I had heard a great deal about it. We started from the head of Jervis Inlet on the 22nd of February for Desolation Sound, in a small canoe with four Indians, pick, pan, shovel, and rocker ; came doAvn the west entrance of Jervis Inlet, which is much better than the eastern. From Scotch-Fir Point, up the coast, it is shallow, and rocks and reefs running out a good distance from the shore. It was most refreshing to come down on the gulf, where the land had all the appearance of spring, and after being so long up the inlet. No snow on any of the islands along the coast except Tarada. Savary Island has all the appearance of a fiirm under cultivation, from the abundance of grass on it : large patches of ftirming land make it look very enticing, but the water is scarce for farming purposes ; yet there are excellent pastures for stock all the year round. The mainland opposite this island changes in appearance with regard to the rock formation : quartz and slate along the shore up to Sarah Point. We arrived safe in Desolation Sound, which does certainly look somewhat desolate in a snow-storm ; but I am well pleased with the prospect of this section. This is the first time I have seen pure veins of sulphuret of iron, which looks very much like silver. The first I saw of it was a small square piece in the ^wssession of an Indian : I oftered him some tobacco for it, but he would not part with it, even if I gave him its weight in gold. I came across a number of seams of the same kind. It lies in the quartz, the same as gold. I HSve no idea that the gold is confined to Eraser River alone ; and if it can only he found from the seaboard or on the rivers, at the head of some of these inlets, the country will soon be prospected. ill;, H.1 I #: lil! ^IM 448 KXPLOllATIONS IN JKUVIS INLKT A PH. l^iito IiiUf (llciiiiatlico), tlifxt niiis so niiich fiirtlier north tlian tliis inlet, liiiH a lai';4(' river emptying into it iVoni the norlli-wcHt. This river looks iiioHt fiivonrablc lur jiold, ami I shoulil much like to have proHpectetl it ; hut the Indians would not ^o, as tliey were ai'raid of the Kuclitus trilK.'s,*'but the princiiial reason was that the canoe was small, and we were not alto;^ether prepared to give it a fair trial. It was snowing most of the time, and rather discouragini^. Camped near the Klahons Imlians' villac^e : they paid mo a visit, ns a matter of course, and I f^ave them dch a small piece of tohacco. They seemed well pleased; but would have a look at our nuning tools, and canoe, and blankets, and general apjiearanco. AVhen they had satisfied themselves on these ])oints, they told my Indians I was imt a Tyie — mean- ing a chief, a person of consequence (this was the unkindest cut of all). My Indians told them I was a Tyee ; hut it was of no use. They said a Tyec would have a largo canoe and jilenty of blankets, whereas there was nothing of the kind visible ; oidy picks, pans, and an old rocker, and what was the use of that among Indians ? I did not feel disposed to find faidt with the ]X)or Klahous Indians for judging from outward appearance, and, upon the whole, I got ahjng with them ver}^ well. Wc got a few potatoes from them, so there must 1x5 some- thing else besides rocks in Desolation Sound. We Avent up to the head of the inlet, where the " Deserted Village " is on the map, but there were no Indians there. It looked as much like a de- serted village as it did when it was named by Vancouver. Alout two miles above this the river comes in from the north-east. The sand wash- ing out of the river has lornied a large flat at the head ot the inlet, in some places dry at low-water. We had some difliculty in getting the canoe into the river, which is also shallow, being fdled up with sand from the continued wash from the mountains. We went up the river about five miles. The Indians told me it would take five days to go to the head of it. Judging from the way a canoe goes up such rivers, the distance would be about sixty miles, which must be a long distance above the Quamish, and would not be far from the Lilloett. The Indians have gone this route to the head of Bridge River (Hoystier), which it may prove to be the best route to try. It is very evident there is a pass in the Coast llange hero that will make it preferable to Jervis Inlet or Howe Sound. If a route can be got through, it will lead direct to Bridge River. I have seen more black sand here in half a day than I did in California in nine years ; it looks clear and bright, as if it came from quartz. Seeing that it was out of the question to proceed farther, we put back and came down along shore, breaking and trying the rocks, but did not discover any gold : lots of iron pyrites or sulphuret of iron. Tho land on each side of the river is low, and must be overflowed in many places in spring ; but for all that, if a trail can be found through, it will not be diflScult to make a road along the banks of the river. In coming down we passed through what on the map is called the Island A pp. AND DKSOLATION SOUND. 449 " Rcdonda." Tliis is a fine passaj^e, and sliortcns tho distance al)OUt ten miles in going to Klalions Inlet. Tho distance from Klahous Inlet to Homatbco Inlet (Bute Inlet on tlio chart) is about thirty miles ; but I could not get the Indiana to go in the small canoe. The Indians told mo that the colour of tl»'! water in the large river tliat comes in at the head of lloniatbcu fr ; but arrived all ri.uht, ]iaid off tho Indians, and heard from Captain Stuart i\>nt be bad forwardeil Hniiplios to Jervis Inlet by order of your Excellency, so that I was all ready for a sfftrt again to Desolation Sound, if I could obtain a small decked-boat. Fort St. Jnmes, Stuart Lake, New Caledonia, Sir, 10th October, 1859. I l)cg to make the following reiMjrt of my trip to Queen Charlotte Islands, and my journey thence by Fort Simpson to the interior of British Columbia. Having left Victoria on tho 27tb July, with twenty-seven practical miners, with stores, »Src., for three months, wo arrived in Gold Harbour, Queen Charlotte Islands, safely, on tho 6th August, and immediately set about prospecting. We examined the six)t where a large quantity of gold was formerly taken out, and discovered a few specks of it in the small quartz-seams that run through the slate ; two of the party blasting the rock, while others i)ro- spected round the harbour. I then proceeded in a canoe to Douglas Inlet, which runs in south of Gold Harbour, hoping to find traces of the Gold Harbour lead, but without success. The nature of the rock is trap or hornblende, with a few |)oor seams of quartz straggling over the surface. Granite was found at the head of this inlet, but not a si)cck of gold. Next day we went up an inlet to the north of Gold Harbour, and here a white rock showed itself on the spur of a mountain. After a difficult ascent we found it to be nothing but weather-beaten, sun-dried granite, instead of quartz. Farther up the inlet we saw a little black slate and some talcose rock, but nothing that looked like gold. On our return, we found that the men engaged in blasting the rock had given it up ; the few surface specks being all the gold that could he found. The large amount of gold that was formerly found with so little difficulty existed in what is called an offshot or blow. The question then arises how (lid the gold get here. Some of our party were of opinion that a gold lead exists close at hand, but it can only be put down to one of the extraordinary freaks of nature so often found in a mineral country. The offshoots in question are not uncommon, as I have often seen them in California. On such a discovery being made, hundreds of miners would take 2 G Pc Hi,. II s» h i> !i i ,!,» lb: H ■Kdimm-uummn^' 450 EXPLORATIONS IN .lERVIS INLKT Api', claims in all diroctioiis near it, and test the ground in every way ; but notliing fartlior could be found, exceiit in the one spot, about 70 feet in length, running south-east and north-west : on being worked alx)ut 15 feet it gave out, Bcl'ore work eommenoed 1 have blown the sand off a vein of pure gold. I now proposed to test the island liirther, and started for the Skidegato Channel. At a village of the Crosswer Indians, where we were windbound, the appearances were more favourable. Talcose slate, quartz, and red earth were seen. We tried to discover gold, but without success. Sulphuret of iron was found in abundance, and wo discovered traces of previous prospect- ings. The Indians imderstand the search for gold well, and detect it in the rocks (juickcr even than I can. The coast from the Casswer Indian village to Skidegate Channel is wilder than any I have ever before travelled ; and we did not care to hunt for gold in such a place. Five Indians were drowned hero to-day while fishing. At the Skidogate Channel we found black slate and quartz prevailing ; farther north granite app-cars, and then sandstone and conglomerate ; and as we were now in a coal country, it was of no use to look for gold. We saw coal here, but I cannot speak as to its qualitj', not being a judge of it. The formation is similar to that of Nauaimo. From this we re- turned to Gold Harbour, where a party which had remained behind to prospect inland had met with no better success than ourselves. We then consulted what Avas the best thing to do. I did not wish to return to Victoria, as your Excellency had desired me to explore some of the inlets f>n the mainland ; and I left Gokl Harbour with a jiarty of foiu'teen men for Fort Simpson, where we arrived in eight days. The north-west coast of Queen Charlotte Islands is a low sand and gravel flat, having no resemblance to a gold country. I left Fort Simpson for the Skeena IMver on the 31st August. From Fort Simpson to Fort Essington is about 40 miks. The salt water here is of a light-blue colour, like the mouth of Eraser River, and runs inland about 30 miles. The coarse-grained quartz of Fort Simpson is no longer seen here, and granite appears; and the banks of the river are low, and covered with small hard wood and cotton-tnos, with some good-sized white oaks, the first I have seen west of Eraser River. Vessels drawing upwards of 4 feet of water cannot go more than 20 miles n\) the Skeena River ; and it is very milike tlie deep inlets to the southward. At our camp hero some Indians visited us, and told us that they were honest; but next morning the absence of my coat rather negatived their statement. Next day we found the river shoal for loaded canoes, as it had fallen nmch. At our next camji I went up a small river called Scena- toys, and the Indians showed me some crystallized quartz, and to my sur- prise a small piece with gold in it, being the first I had seen in this part. The Indian took me to a granite slide, whence, as he asserted, the piece of quartz had come. I found some thin crusts of fine (piartz, but no gold. From the river Scenatoys to Fort Essington, at the mouth of the Skeena River, is 75 miles. A little below the Scenatoys an Indian trail leads to Fort Simpson, through a low i>ass; and the distance is not great. Aph. y way: but •et in length, > I'eet it gave of i)uro gold, le Skiilegate windbound, nd red earth 5idpluiret of )us prosixict- tcct itin the iiel is wilder unt for gold fishing. prevailing ; rate ; and as jing a judge til is we re- i behind to , We then return to f the inlets een men for est coast of resemblance From Fort here is of a dand about longer seen md covered white oaks, m 20 miles southward, they were itived their noes, as it lied Scena- to ray sur- i this part, he piece of t no gold, he Skeeiia il leads to A pp. AND DESOLATION SOUND. 451 From this, 10 miles farther up, was a river called the Toes. On the south side hence is an Indian trail to the Kitloo]* on the Salmon lliver, the south branch of Salmon, which river is called Kittania. By this time we were fairly over tlie Const liaML:;e, and the mountains ahead of us did n(jt look very higli ; the current here was very strong, and much labour was required to get our canoe along, and we had to pull her up by a ro]ie from the shore. Gold is found hi're, a few specks to the pan, and the whole country looks auriferous, wi ill fine bars and flats with clay on the bars ; the mountains look red, and slate and quartz were seen. The next camp was at the village of Kitalaska, and I started in a light canoe ahead of my party, as our canoe, by all accounts, could not proceed much farther, and I then determined to penetrate to Fort Fraser. The Indian who was with me told me tliat a large stream, called the Kitchumsala, comes in from the north ; the land on it is good, and well adapted for farming, and that the Indians grow plenty of potatoes. To the south is a small stream called the Chimkoatsh, on the south of which is the Plumbago Mountain, of which I had some in my hand, as clear as polished silver, and runs in veins of quartz. Near to this, on a tree, are the words " Pioneer, H.B.C.," and nearly overgrown with bark. The Indian told me it was cut by Mr. John Work, a long time ago. From this to the village of Kitcoonsa the land improves, the moimtains recede from the river, and fine flats run away 4 or 5 miles back to their bases, where the smoke is seen rising from the huts of the Indians engaged in drying berries for the winter. These Indians were very kind to us, and wished me to build a house there, and live with them. Above the village of Kitcoonsa the pros^xict of gold is not so good as below. As the season was so advanced I was not able to prospect the hills, which look so well, and unless the Government takes it in hand, it will be a long while before the mineral resources of this part of British Columbia can be known. This is the best-looking mineral country I have seen in British Columbia. From here to the village of Kitsagatala tho river is rocky and dangerous, and our canoe was split *'rom stem to stern. At Kitsagatala we entered a most extensive coal country, the seams being in sight, and cut through by the river, and nmning up the banks on both sides, varying in thickness from 3 to 35 feet. The veins are larger on the east side, and are covered with soft sandstone, which gives easily to the pick ; on the west side quartz lines the seams, which are smaller. The veins dip into the bank for a mile along the river, and could easily be worked by tunnels on the i'ace, or by sinking shafts from behind u;i the flats, as they run into soft earth. I have seen no coal like this in all my travels in British Columbia and Vancouver Island. W^e experienced some danger from Indians here, but by a small present 2 (J 2 !)U «li y.!^ ' , ly jL Tu- js ugri . ' a ^- ri frS « 4r>2 EXPLORATIONS IN JEIIVIS INLET A pp. of tobacco, and by ca determined and unconcerned aspect, I succeeded in avoiding the danger of a collision with them. We could go no farther in the canoe than Kittamarks or the Forks of the Skeena River, and we had been twenty days from Fort Simpson, though the journey could have been done in a third of that time. On the 21st September I left Kittamarks with two white men and two Indians, and started over a fine trail through a beautiful country for Fort Fraser. We crossed over an Indian susiX!nsiou-brid,ii;e, and entered some first-rate land, our course being about east; we completed about 12 miles to-day. Next day it rained hard, but we succeeded in doing 12 miles again, passing through as fine a farming country as one could wish to see. To the south-east a large open space appeared, and I have since learnt that a chain of lakes runs away here, being the projxjr way to Fort Fraser ; but as I always follow my Indian guides implicitly, I did so on this occasion. I'lio third day the weather was fine, but the trail not so good ; it ran along tlie side of a mountain, but below the trail was good and grass abundant. My Indians started after a goat up the mountain, but were cpiickly driven back by three bears. The fourth day we crossed what is called the Rocky Pass, which may be avoided bj' keeping the bottom. To the north a chain of mountains were seen covered with snow, distant about 30 miles, where the Hudson Bay Company have a post called Bears' Fort ; to the south is the Indian village Kisjiyaths ; along the bottom runs the Skeena, past the village of Allagasomeda, and farther up the village of Kithathratts, on tlie same river. On the fifth day we encountered some dangerous-looking Indians, but got away from them. We passed through a fine country, with cotton-trees and good soil. We now arrived at the village of Naas-Glee where the Skeena River rises. We were again on the river which we had left five days ago, having travelled 55 miles, when we might have come by the river. We had great difficulty with the Indians here, and it was fortunate that I knew the name of the chief, as otherwise they would have seized all our property ; as it was, they surrounded us, and were most importunate : one wanted my coat, another my gun, a third took my cap from my head, and I really thought that they would murder us. These Indians are the worst I have seen in all my travels. Naas-Glee is a great fishing-station, and all the worst cliaracters congregate there to lead an indolent life. Thousands of salmon were being dried at this village. We hardly knew what to do, as they told us that it was ten days to Fort Fraser, and if we returned they would have robbed us of eveiything. I therefore detenninod to go on, if the chief Norra would accompany me, and on giving him some presents he consented to do so. The river from Naas- Glee downwards is very rapid, but as the banks are low and flat a waggon - road or railroad could easily be made. The land around Naas-Glee is excellent, and wild hay and long grass abound. Potatoes are not grown here, owing to the thieving of the Indians. A pp. AlT. AND DESOLATION SOUND. 453 cceeded in fartlier in iiid we had liave been n and two ry for Fort tercd some t 12 miles ? 12 miles ish to see. learnt that raser ; hut s occasion, ran along abundant, vly driven tlie Eccky th a chain iles, where e south is I, past tlie ihratts, on ns, but got i-trees and ;ena River go, having ! had great V the name crty ; as it 1 my coat, [y thought ve seen in the worst of salmon lys to Fort y^thing. I y me, and rom Naas- long grass c Indians. There is no heavy pine timber hereabouts, and the canoes arc made of cotton- wood. Above Naas-Glec the river was very rapid, and it required all our energy to got along, as we had but a small quantity of dried salmon to last us ten days. Ten miles above Naas-Glec is an old Indian village, called Whatatt ; here the shoal-water ends, and we enter the Babine Lake. Going through a fine country, we accomplished 20 nn'lcs this day, the lake being broad and deep. Next morning, to my surprise, I found a canoe at our camp, with Frenchmen and Indians, in charge of Mr. Savin Hamilton, an officer in the service of the Hudson Bay Company, from Fort St. James, Stuart Lake, New Caledonia, whither we were bound. He was on his way to Naas- Glee to purchase fish, and advised me to return with him there, and then to accompany him to Stuart Lake ; but as I had seen enough of Naas- Glee I declined his offer, with thanks. Mr. Hamilton expressed his sur- prise that we had managed to get away fioni Naas-Glee, as we were the first white men who had come through this route ; and even he found much difficulty with the Indians there. Having persuaded Narra, the chief, to let us have his canoe, we bid farewell to Mr. Hamilton, and proceeded on our journey. It was fortunate that we sent back our two Indians, as otherwise we sliould have suffered from want of food, and as it was we reached Stuart Lake only with gi-eat difficulty. We made a fine run to-day before a fair wind to Fort Killamoures, which post is only kept up in the winter. Our course from Naas-Glce to this place was south-east, and the distance about 50 miles. The land is good the whole way, with long grass on the benches near the fort, which is a very lonely place. It is a great jiity to sec this beautiful country, so well adapted to the wants of man, lying waste, when so many Englishmen and Scotsmen would be glad to come here and till the soil. Babine Lake is deej), and in some places 5 or 6 miles wide, with islands and points of land to afford shelter from storms. From Fort Killa- moures to the head of Babine is about 40 miles, direction south-south-east. From the head down about 20 miles it runs east and west. We arrived at the head of Babine on the seventh day after leaving Naas-Glee. We had seen no Indians, nor snow, and had made a favourable journey. The district we had passed Avas well adapted for fanning. Some of the land is rocky, but on the whole it is a fine coimtry. At the head of Babine Lake there is a good site lor a town, and a harboiir could be made, as a stream flows in which would supply the town with water. This is what I call the head-water of the Skeena River. The lake is navigable for steamei-s, and 100 miles in length. From this to Stuart Lake there is a portage over a good trail, through the finest grove of cotton- wood I have ever seen. The ground was thickly strewed with yellow leaves, giving the scene quite an autumnal apix.'arance, and presenting a picture far diflbrent to what we exiMjcted in this part of British Columbia. Six miles from Babine we came to a small lake where were some Indians It ■ .* i'f: iii II. Ill 454 EXPLORATIONS IN JERVIS INLET, &c. App. fishing for herrings. On our approach they ajipearctl undecided whether to run or remain. I asked them for some food, and they soon provided us with some fish, whicli refrcslied us much, and having paid for our repast, we started again. From tliis a small stream runs a distance of 4 miles to Stuart Lake. Arrived at Stuart Lake, we found no means of crossing, no Indians to direct us, and no food to sustain us, nor had wc any shot to enable us to kill ducks. We camped here three nights without i'ood, sleeping the gi-eater part of the time to stifle our hunger. The only thing that sujiiwrtcd us was the great idea of the enterprise in which wc were engaged, having been the first to explore the route from the Pacific to Fraser River. One of our party found an old canoe split to pieces ; this was rigged on a raft of logs, as well as circumstances would admit. I returned to the Indians above mentioned, and purchased a few herrings, and walked back to our camp with difficulty, and found my limbs giving way. Next morning we started on our frail raft, expecting every moment to go down ; wc were obliged to sit perfectly still, as the least movement would have ui)set us. A slight breeze sprung up, and a small sea washed over us, and wc had to run for a lee shore, where kind Providence sent an Indian to succour us. He welcomed us with a " Ronjour," invited us to his lodge, and gave us most cxct;lleut salmon-trout from the lake. We had at last reached this spot, with thankful hearts for our i>reservation through so many dangers. We stayed a night with this good Indian, and next day gave him a blanket to take us to the Fort. We abandoned our old canoe without regret, and proceeded towards our destination. The Ind^^ns all along this w'ere very kind to us. About half-way across Stuart Lake we obtained a small prospect of gold. On the north side of the lake, for about 20 miles, the ground is rocky ; but south, towards the Fort, the land is good, and will produce anything. We reached Fort St. James on the 9tli October, and were received by INIr. Peter Ogden with that kindness and huspitality which I have always found at the Hudson Ray Company's ports. The Fort is very much exposed to all winds, and I found it colder than anywhere on the journej\ Stuart Lake is 50 miles long. The portage to Rabine 10 miles ; Rabine Lake 100 miles ; from Naas-Glee to Fort Simpson 250 miles, and 200 miles from Fort Simpson to Gold Harbour, Queen Charlotte Islands. The names of the two men who accompanied me were William Manning an Englishman, and Frank Chotoan a French Canadian. It is possible that I shall prospect the Fraser a little farther this fall. A pp. LIST OF TREES AND SHUU13S. nn LIST OF TREES AND SHRUBS OF ECONOMIC VALUE, FOUND IN VANCOUVER ISLAND. (Extracted from Dr. Fordeb's Prize Essay cm Vancouver Islaiul.) Popular Names. Scientific Names. The Douglas Pine or Oregon Rcil Pine Abies Douglasii. Spmcc Fir „ Menziesii. Yellow Fir „ grandis. Balsam Fir Hemlock Spruce Abies Canadiensis. Wild Cheny Cerasus mollis. White Pine or Weymouth Pine .. Pinus strobus. Yellow Pine Pinus ^xjuderosa. Cedar — the Oregon Cedar . . . . Thuja gigantea. Yellow Cypress Cuin-essus Metkatenses. Arboi" VitBo Thuja phcata. Yew Taxus brevitblia. The Oak Quercus Garryana. The white, or broad-leaved Maple .. Acer macrophyllum. Vine ditto .. Acer circinatum. The Oregon Alder Alnus Oregona. Oregon Dogwood Coiuus Nuttallii. Arbutus Arbutus Menziesii. American Aspen Populus tremuloidcs. Oregon Crab Apple The Willow Pynis rivularis. Cottonwood Salix Scouleriana. Shritbbery UNDERaROWrU. The Hazel Corylus Americana. Red Cornel, or Willow Cornus Drummondii. Holly-leaved Barberry or Oregon resaid, by free miners requiring the same, and obtaining a grant or licence from the Gold Commissioner, and paying a compensation for waste or damage to the person whose land may be wasted or damaged by such water privilege or carriage of water, to be ascertained in case of dispute in manner aforesaid. 17. In case anj'- dispute shall arise between persona with regard to any land so acquired as aforesaid, any one of the parties in difference may (before ejectment or action of trespass brought) refer the question in dilVerence to the nearest magistrate, who is hereby authorized to proceed in a siunmary way to restore the possession of any land in disi)ute to the person whom he may deem entitled to the same, and to abate all intrusions, and award and levy such costs and damages as he may think fit. Ko. III. Dated 20th Jan. 18G0. Wheufas by virtue of an Act of Parliament made and passed in the 21st and 22nd years of the reign of Her most gracious ^Majesty the Queen, and by a Commission under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in conformity therewith, I, James Douglas, Govemor of the Colony of British Columbia, have been authorized by Proclamation, issued under the Public Seal of the said Colony, to make laws, institutions, and ordinances for the peace, order, and good government of the same. And whereas it is expedient that town lots, suburban lots, and surveyed agricultitral lands in British Columbia, which have been or which hereafter may be offered for sale at public ouction, and remain unsold, should be sold by private contract. Now, therefore, I, James Douglas, Governor of British Columbia, by virtue of the authority aforesaid, do proclaim, order, and enact as follows : — The Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for the time being for British Columbia, and all magistrates. Gold Commissioners, and Assistant Gold Commissioners, by the said Chief Commissioner authorized in writing in that behalf, may sell by private contract any of the lots and lands herein- after mentioned, at the prices and on the terms hereinafter respectively stated, viz : — (rt.) Town and suburban lots which have been or hereafter may be ofkered "-WWUfW'fW'WW! I 460 LAND PROCLAMATIONS. A pp. for sale ftt puWic auction, and remain unsold, at the upset price, and on the tcmis at and on which the same were ofTcrcd for sale at such auction. (A.) Agricultural lands survejed hy the Government Surveyor which may or shall have heen offered for sale at public auction, and remain unsold at 10s. per acre, payable one-half in cash at the time of sale, and the other half at the exi)iration of two years from such sale. And the purchaser of any agricultural land aforesaid shall purchase, subject to such rights of way and water as may be hereafter declared by some writing under the hand of the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works aforesaid. No. IV. Dated Idth Jan. 1861. Wheueas, imder and by virtue of an Act of Parliament made and jiasscd in the session of Parliament held in the 21st and 22nd years of the reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, intituled ' An Act to i)rovide for the govern- ment of British Columbia,' and by a commission under the Great Seal of the Unitc^d Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, I, James Douglas, have been apjiointed Governor of the said Colony, and have been authorized by Proclamation under the Public Seal of the said Colony to make laws, insti- tutions, and ordinances for the peace, order, and good government of tlu; same. And whereas, by a Proclamation issued under the Public Seal of the said Colony, on the 4th day of January, 1860, the jjrice of unsurvcyed land acquired by purchase or pre-emption under the provisions of the said Pro- clamation, was stated to be at such rate as might for the time being 1x5 fixed by the Government of British Columbia, not exceeding the sum of 10s. per acre. And whereas, by a Proclamation is'-ued under the Public Seal of the said Colony, on the 20th day of January, 1860, the price of agric Itural land, surveyed by the Government Surveyor, which may or shaU nave been offered foe sale at public auction and remain unsold, was fixed at 10s. per acre, payable one-half in cash at the time of sale, and the other half at the expiration of two years from the time of sale. And whereas I have been empowered by Her Majesty's Government to lower the price of country lands in British Columbia, in all cases, to the sum of 4s. 2d. per acre. Now, therefore, I do hereby declare, proclaim, and enact aa follows : — I. So much of the said Proclamation of the 20th day of January, 1860, as fixed the price of surveyed agricultural land at 10s. per acre is hereby repealed. II. The price of all unsurveyed country land in British Columbia, whether acquired by pre-emption or purchase under the Proclamation dated the 4th day of January, 1860, shall be 4s. 2c?. per acre. III. The upset price of all country lands in British Columbia exposed for Side at public auction shall be 4s. 2d. jxjr acre. Ai'r. , and on tlio ction. eyor wliic-h iiain unsold id the other purchase, eclaml by I and Works and jiasscd tlio reign of the ffovorn- eat Seal of OLAs, have hojized by laws, insti- lent of thc! of the said 'oyed land said Pro- ! being ho lie sum of af the said ural land, 'lavc been It 10s. per alf at the nment to !8, to the vvs ; — ly, 18G0, 8 liereby whether itcd the x)sed for A pp. LAND PROCLAMATIONS. 4Ci IV. This Proclamation may be cited for all purix)8cs as the 'Country Land Act, 18fil.' Issued under the Public Seal of the said Colony at Victoria, Van- couver Island, the 19th day of January, in the year of om Lord 18(»l, and in the 24th year of Her Majesty's reign, by me, James Douglas. Py commn.nd of his Excellency, William A. G. Youno, Acting Colonial Secretary. A Proclamation, dated May 18, 1861, has also been issued, conferring certain reinissions in the purchase-money of country lands purcliasal for iintual settlement by retired military and naval ofliccrs. VANCOUVER ISLAND. Land Proclamations By his Excellency James Douglas, C.R., &c. &c. I. WiiEiiEAS I have been empowered by Her Majesty's Government to fix the U[iset price of country land within the colony of Vancouver Island and its dependencies at 4s. 2d. per acre. And whereas I liave been authorized as aforesaid to take such steps as may tend to promote the settlement of country land in the said colony. And whereas it is expedient to make public the method by which huna fide settlers may acquire the same land. Be it theretbre known unto all men : All country land to he sold at 4s. 2d. per acre. I. That the upset price of all country land in Vancouver Island shall be from henceforth 4s. 2d. per acre. British subjects may enter upon and occupy land, not being otherwise reserved, in certain quantities and in certain districts. II. That from and after the date hereof, male British subjects, and aliens who shall take the oath of allegiance before the Chief Justice of Vancouver Island, above the age of eighteen years, may pre-emjit unsold Crown lands in the districts of Victoria, Esquimalt, Metchosen, the Highlands, Sooke, North and South Saanicli, Salt Spring Island, Sallas Island, and Chemanis (not being an Indian reserve or settlement), of the area and under the con- ditions following : A single man, 150 acres. A married man, whose wife is resident in the colony, 200 acres. For each of his children under the age of eighteen years, resident in the said colony, an additional 10 acres. 4G2 LAND PROCLAMATIONS. A pp. Pre-emplor, hiforc recorfliu;/ his chtimf to tdhe the oath ctf aUrf/iimce if a Jiritish snhjcct vho hux birmne subject to mnitr othi r iiation. III. All liritisli Kubjc'clH, who .sliall he (k'nirouH of ine-cniiitin^, and who may, ut the timo of record, have taken the oath of allegiance to, or lieconio the suhject or citizen of any foreign Sovereij^n, state, or nation, hIkiII, us a condition precedent to recording; their clainiH, take the oath of alle;j;iance in manner aforesaid. J'i'e-emjitor to record his chiim immciUatdy on ocrajxttton. Fee. IV. Immediately after occuiiation, the pre-emptor shall record his claim at the olhco of tlio Surveyor-General at Victoria; paying for snch record tlie sum of eight shillings and four pence. Jiet/ulatinij the form of claims. V. The land selected, if unsurveycd, shall he of a rectangular form, and the shortest side of said rectangle shall be two-lifths the length of tlie longest side ; and the boundaries of such land shall also run as nearly as IKjHsible by the cardinal points of the compass. VI. Where the land sought to be acipiircd is unsurveycd, and in whole or pfut bounded by rocks, nioimtains, lakes, swamps, the margin of a river, or the sea-coast, or other natural li)oundaries, then such natural boundaries may be adopted as the boundaries of the land selected. VII. The claimant shall, if the land is unsurveycd, give the best possible , tlio Kaid Surveyor-Oonc'riil hIiuU iHsiu) to him or tli( m ,i ccrtilicato ol' iinjiruVfUieiit, in the form niaikoil A in tliL' sclic'lulc iieieto. lUMcr of ceitijioite vf imjuuonm^d iiniij hi 11, lumv, or morlijui/)'. XI. UjHin tlic grunt of ♦ he certificate of inipruvenicnt aforesaiil, the person to wliom the same \h issued niay, suhject to any nniiaid instahnents, sell, mort^aj^e, or Kiise tlie hind in resinct of wiiicli fincii certitieate has In'en isHnetl; hut until the iiitirety of the innchase-nioney of the said land hafi lx;cn paid, no sjile, niort i.;e, or lease of the said land shall he valid unless a certilicato uf iniprovcnH as aforesaid lias been iasncd in respect thereof. Votivvynuci' of suyvi iicil lands, XII. I'lion paynuiit of the entirety of the jmrcliase-nioney, a conveyance of the land shall lie executed in favour of the pre-eniptor, reserving to the (Jrown the right to take back so much tliereof as may he required for roads or other imhlic purposes, and reserving also the precious minerals, with a right to enter and work the same in favour of the Crown, its assigns and licencees. Conveyance of pre-empted dnini in unsnrveyed hinds. XIII. If the land is not then included in the Governmont Survey, the conveyance shall, with the reservations aforesaid, be executed as sckiu as jjossible after tlie same is so included ; and the pre-enipt(jr shall, xipon survey, be entitled to take any quantity of unpre-enipted land, at the price of four shillings and two pence per acre, which may be laid ofl" into the sections in which liis pre-empted land is situate; or, if unwilling so to do, he shall forfeit so much of the pre-empted land as lies in those sections which he is unwilling to purchase. rrioritics. XIV. rriority of title shall be obtained by the person who, being in actual occupation, shall first record his claim in manner aforesaid. Forfeiture hy cessation of occupation. XV. AVhenever any person shall cease to occupy land pre-empted as aforesaid for the space of two montjis, the Surveyor-General may, in a sum- mary way, on being satisfied of such permanent cessation, cancel the claim of the person so ceasing to occujiy the same, and record de novo the claim of any other person satisfying the requisitions aforesaid ; and in the event of any person feeling aggrieved thereat, his remedy shall be personally against the person so recording. Compensation for waste or injury. XVI. In the event of the Crown, its assigns or licencees, availing itself or themselves of the reservation to enter and work the precious minerals as aforesaid, a reasonable compensation for the waste and damage done shall be paid by the person entering and working to the person whose land shall be wasted or damaged as aforesaid ; and in case of any dispute, a jury of six men, to be summoned by the Surveyor-General, shall settle the same. XVII. Nothing in the conditions hereinbefore contained, or in any title 4G4 LAND PROCLAMATIONS. App. to be derived hereunder, shall be construed as giving a right to any claimant to exclude licencees of the Crown from searching for any of the precious minerals in any unenclosed land on the conditions aforesaid. Saving of water privileges for mining purposes. XVin. Water privileges, and the right of carrying water for mining purix)ses, may, notwithstanding any claim recorded, certificate of improve- ment, or conveyance aforesaid, be claimed and taken upon, under, or over the land so pre-empted by miners requiring the same, and obtaining a grant or licence from the Surveyor-General in that behalf, and paying a compen- sation for waste or damage to the person whose land may be wasted or damaged by such water privilege or carrying of water, to be ascertained, in case of dispute, by a jury of six men in manner aforesaid. Arhitration, XIX. In case any dispute shall arise between persons with regard to any land acquired as aforesaid, any one of the parties in difference may (before ejectment or action of trespass brought) refer the question in difference to the Surveyor-General, who is hereby authorised to proceed in a summary way to restore the jKjssession of any land in dispute to the ix?rson whom he may deem entitled to the same ; and to abate all intrusions and award and levy such costs and damages as he may think fit, and for all or any of the pur- poses aforesaid to call in to his assistance the civil authorities or any process of law. Given under my hand, &c. James Douglas. II. Whereas I have been empowered by Her Majesty's Government to take such steps as may tend to promote the settlement of country land in the said co'.ony. And whereas it is expedient to extend the time during which a person may cease to occupy land pre-empted under the provisions of a Proclamation given under my hand and the public seal of this colony, and dated the 19th day of February, 1861. Now therefore, be it known unto all men that any person having pre- empted land under the provisions of the said Proclamation may, if he shall have been continuously in occupation of the same for the space of (8) eight calendar months next previously to his leaving, leave the same for any period not exceeding (6) six calendar months, provided that within (21) twenty- one days from the date of his leaving the same he shall fill in a memorandum in the book kept for that purpose in the Land Office at Victoria, with the particulars and in the manner therein contjiined. Given under my hand and the public seal, &c. James Douolas. ( 405 ) INDEX. , ADMIRAL. A. Admiral Islaml, 152. Admiralty Inlet, 2:5. Albeini Settk'mont, 229. Alexaiidri.i, Fort, 84. America, North-west, sketi:li of British possessions in, 1 ; claims of Groat Bri- tain to, 8. American 'cuteness, 48 ; drinking habits, 1G3 ; phraseology, 100. Anderson, Mr,, 43. Hivcr, 108. Apostolos Valerianos. See Juan de Fuca. Arrowsmith, Mount, 170, B. Babine Lake, 84. Iiivci-, ib. ' Bacchante,' H.M.S., 225. Bamfield, Mr., 107, 170, 270, Barclay Sound, 226. Barston, Mr., 147. Banermaiin, Mr, 351, Bayues, Admiral Sir H. L., 153. Beaver Harbour, 182. Becher Bay, 22. l>entinck Arms, 140, 404. Berkeley, Captain, 6. Birds' down, symbolical use of, 2(39. Bishop of British Columbia, 107, 341. Boston Bar, 108. Boundary disputes, 9, 34, 89, 139; marks, 233. Bridge River, 131. Biitish Columbia, area, 13; bush in, 50, 72, 88, 233 ; climate, 105 ; coast of, 81 ; geology, 372, 374 ; inlets, 141 ; interior, 383 ; land system, 393 ; na- tural resources, 405 ; routes to, 350. Buonaparte River, 125, 120. Burrard Inlet, 141. Bush in British Columbia, thickness of, 50, 71, 88, 233. Bute Inlet, 144. DUNCAN, c. California, 154. Camp-life in bush, lul ; in boat.-., 215, Canal de llaro, 79, Cannibalism, Indian, 254, 287. ' Canoe journey, 60, 02, 04. Cariboo diggings, 85. —~~— Lake, ib. Cavendish, Captain, 3, 5, Cayoush. Sec Lilloett. Cliapeau River and Valley, 127. Chase liiver, 35, Chatham Point, 179, Chinook jargon, 244, Chowdar, 18. (."oal in British Columbia, 380 ; in Van- couver Island, 35. Columbia River, 5, 81. Cook, Captain, 0. Cormorant Bay, 208. Courtenay River, 173. Coutts, Miss Burdett, 342. Cowitchen Harbour, 152. Indians, 342. Valley, 395. Cradles, Indian, 303. D. Deans Canal, 14G, Deer in Orcas Island, 39, Deity, Indian notions of, 294. Derby, 72. Disolation Sound, 373. Discovery Island, 80. Disturbance at Ksquimalt, 63 Douglas, His Kxcelle.icy J., C.B., 27, 49 54. ., Port, 130, 235. fir, the, 409, 410. Downie, Mr., 144, 187, 373. Drayton Harbour, 33. Duncan, Mr., the missionary teacher, 77, 78, 249, 254, 203,283, 288, 305, 307, 309, 315,321. 2 H I I i I ?♦ 4G6 INDEX. ECLIPSE. E. Eclipse, observations on, 20(3. Ksquimalt, 24, 25, 20, 28, 29, 52. Expresses and Kxpi ess-men, 7 1 . [•"argo Bar, 93. Vit'e Sounii, 145, Fisli, Indian mode ot" catching, 23, 254, 40(3 ; quantity of, 405, 407, 419. Fish-priests, 259. I-'lat-head Indians, 277, 303. Flattery, Oipe, G, 19. Flood, Indian traditions of, 273. Flumes, 432. Fogs in Gulf of Georgia, 208, 214. Forbes, Dr., 37G. Fort Conolly, 84. St. Geon,'e, 84. « Forward,' H.M.S., 75, 206, 221, 223. Fountain, 131. Fraser, Mr. Simon, 7. — Hiver, 43, 49, 60, 63, 81-7, 90, 95, 142. , upper cauons of, 105. Fur Brigade, 124. Furs, A'alue of, 185. 0. Gamblini;, Indian, 30. 'Ganges/ H. M.S., 140, Georgia. Gulf of, 32, 176, 275. Gold, discovery of, on F"'raser Hiver, 43 ; at Cariboo and (Juesnelle Lakes, 85; at Queen Charlotte Island, 187. Me- thod of worl, 1'2, ;J0 ; hos- einpl(ji/v.-i, 115'; 117; jjosts ami nee of .system, slands, 17. .11(1, 23, ;iO, 50, n, co.ist tribes, 03, 119, 10."); 201 ; desire lor jr of, 243 ; laii- 254,257; can- ine-men, 260 ; iir, 270; sepul- is, 275-293. ti.sli Columbia, ) ; friendly di.s- 7, 19, 20, 21. LG. s of, 252. 35. 168. 3. I, 132. INDEX. 4(J7 MININ'G. Mining Bars, 65, 66. Missions to Indians, 305, 340. Mcody, Port, 142. Mosquitoes, 135, 202. Mount St. Paul, 121. Mudge, Cape, 75. N. Nanaimo, 12, 35, 36, 172, 173. Nanoose Harbour, 165. Neali Bay, 22, 23. Negroes, 351. New Archangel, 12. Caledonia, 12. Newcastle Island, 35. New Langlcy. See Derby. Westminster, 72, 87, 88, 224. Nicola Lake, 113. River, 112. Nlmpkish IJiver, 178, 179. Nootka, 7. North-west passage, 3, 6. Orcas Island, 39. Ornamenti worn by Indians, 281. Pacific Fur Company, 8. , shores of, 1, 2, 154. Palaver with Indians, 209. Pallitcr, Captain, 359. Pavilion, 129, 385, , Lake, 128. Pearce, 5Ir., report of districts near Xa- naimo, 396. ' Plumper,' II. M.S., 10, 11, 14, 24, 32, 34, 35, 37, 43, 52, 53, 55, OU, 72, 79, 138, 139, 153, 164, 188, 189, 191, 206, 207, 221, 224. Pines, size of, 182, Polygamy, Indian, 276. Prevo.st, Captain, 10, 338. Propitiatory feasts, Indian, 266. Prospecting for gold, 427. Provisions, doarness of, 56; piicos of, 401, 402. TIJinER. I Quesnello Lake, 85. I Quicksilver, 427. Q. Quartz-crushing, 440. Queenborough. Sto New Westminster. Queen Charlotte Islands, 44, 186. Que-que-alla River, 67. B. Race Islands, 21, Rain-makers, Indian, 803. Religious feasts, Indian, 2']i\. Restaurants in British Columbia, 133, 2u5. Richards, Captain, 10, 11, 33, 166, 209, 211. Roberts, Point, 52. 81. Roman Catholic Church in British Co- lumbia and Vancouver Island, 175, 176, 30 6. Routes to British Columbia, 356. Rupert, Fort, 183, 184, 208, 209, 210. Russia, fur-trade of, 12 ; claims of, to North America, 8, 9. Saanich Inlet, 152. St. Airne.s Well, 137. St. Paul, Indian Chief, 70, 120. San Francisco, 155, 150, 157, 159. San Juan Island, 37, 39, 41, 80. Port, 22. Sandwich Islands, 14-19. 'Satellite,' II. M.S., 10, 36, 51, 206. School, Indian, 1)15. Semiahmoo Bay, 32, 33, 52. Semilkameen Country, 387. Valley, 115. Seton Lake, 135. Seymour Narrows, 176. Shoofinahnats, Journal of, 338. Shuswap Indians, 118. Sluicins, gold-, 431, 435. Snags, 92. Songliie Indians, 30, 244. Soiike Ilaibour, 22, 394. _ Inlet, 22. I Spain, settlements of, in the Pacific, 1, I o 7 j Spuzzum, 108. I Steamboat-travelling on Fraser, 91. i Stern-whcil steamers, 90. Sturgeon Bank, 81. T. Tatoosh Island, 19. Tea, wild, 413. ' Termagant,' H.M.S., 206, 207. Thompson River, 111. Timber, 88, 154, 395, 397, 406, 407, 410, 411. 1*1 2 H 2 SI ^ .f» 4(38 INDEX. TOBACCO. Tobacco, Indian sub.->titute for, 257, 413. Tenons, Captain, 1S7. Tradins; with Imlians, 7(). Tranquillc River, IS.i. 'IViangle Islaml, 181). ' Tribune,' H.:\I.S., 77. Trivott, Captain, 19. TJ. Ucletah Indians, 74, 75, 245. Umatilla snag, 92. United States, claims of, 8 ; disputes with (Ireat Britain, 9 ; treaty, i'j. YALi;. Vif^ilanco Committee of Sau Fiancisco, 59, 157. W. Water, abundance of, in British Columbia, 42G. Weather, variableness of, 225, 422. Wells' ex])ress, 45, 71. Wild-fowl, 17;{. Wood, Dr., 11, 173, 191,371; account of Fauna and Flora of the colonies, 413. Wyadda Island, 22. Vancouver, Ca))tain, (J, 7. Victoria, 20, 27, 29, 31, 43, 44, 46, 55, i Yale, 58, GO, 07, 08, 90. 75,77,190. ,Mr., 00. LOMMJK : I'KlNTEl) BV \V. CLOWl-S AND SONS, STAMIOKD STKtKT, AND CUAUING CKOSS. 1 k ^'""i Fiancis, mcisco, British Columbia. I' -'25, 4-.'2. yl> ^'^ ; "t'couiit ^ the colonies, 4 13_ >: I J II' llnhHiilll Aliii'l.jlr .1 ' '\ ^ - • V r — -,\ r^ u l.'lalii ■, I, st.i..ii i;Vv "^ J,.lT,.n,v.,.,.i;^ .«■ L. A V i A 1- E 1) ()N J,.,..,. B ■^ ^ ^ Mor,-sliA. '■■. 's Islau. 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