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Vancouver Island鈥檚 forgotten colonial history

Jan 11, 2017, 5:44 AM | Updated: 7:05 am

Vancouver Island...

"An engraving of Victoria, Vancouver Island as it appeared in 1860." (Courtesy Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division.)

(Courtesy Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division.)

This Friday marks an important but mostly forgotten anniversary of an odd but oddly resonant chapter of Pacific Northwest history north of the border.

It was on Jan. 13, 1849 that Great Britain formally granted a 鈥渃harter鈥 to the to run Vancouver Island as a British colony under private management. Hudson鈥檚 Bay was to be responsible for everything on the island, including enforcing laws and negotiating treaties with Natives, for most of the 1850s. They paid Great Britain a paltry seven shillings a year for the privilege.

Related: Remembering Washington鈥檚 complicated first governor Isaac Stevens

Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company, which is nowadays mostly a department store chain, was originally created by British Royal Charter in 1670 to harvest fur from what鈥檚 now Eastern Canada. The company expanded across North America all the way to what鈥檚 now Oregon and Washington in the early 1800s.

Fort Vancouver

It was the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company that founded Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River; Fort Nisqually in Pierce County; and Fort Colville east of the mountains (and various other establishments). They were a huge economic, cultural and political force 鈥 and sometimes a help, and other times a source of friction for American settlers 鈥 around here in the years from 1818, when the British and Americans agreed to jointly occupy Oregon Country, to 1846, when the boundary between the US and British North America was officially settled on the 49th parallel.

Dr. John Lutz is a historian at the University of Victoria on Vancouver Island. He says the British gave up on their legitimate claims to possession of the Oregon Country, where the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company had been such a force, to avoid a larger conflict with the US and its bellicose Commander-in-Chief.

鈥淸The British] had every reason not to provoke the Americans into conflict,鈥 Lutz said. 鈥淭he President at the time, Polk, [was] something [of] a Trump-like character, he was bombastic and threatening.鈥

Lutz also says that the British may not have fully appreciated what they were giving up, especially the ports on Puget Sound that rapidly became so important to the economy here in the second half of the 19th century.

Once the new boundary was set, Hudson鈥檚 Bay pulled up stakes from Fort Vancouver and Fort Nisqually and moved to new digs at Victoria on Vancouver Island. They tried to hang on to that valuable real estate for Great Britain, lest American expansion should continue north. One way to keep this from happening was to encourage Brits to settle there.

The arrangement in 1849 between the British parliament and Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company to give the fur traders control of Vancouver Island was perhaps extreme, but it was also perhaps the surest (and cheapest) way to keep the Americans from overrunning and gradually taking Vancouver Island away from the British.

Related: Washingtonians can thank rebel supporter for their state鈥檚 name

Professor Lutz says that the powers vested in the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company for Vancouver Island were vast, and went far beyond the exclusive trading rights they鈥檇 been granted for the mainland in 1670.

鈥淭his was the only place in Canada where they basically had the government give them ownership of all the land, all the resources, [and] left them in charge of dealing with the First Nations,鈥 Lutz said. 鈥淭hey were the government.鈥

Well, says Lutz, correcting himself, they weren鈥檛 quite the only government on Vancouver Island.

鈥淸The British parliament] actually appointed an independent governor, poor guy,鈥 said Lutz. This 鈥減oor guy鈥 was a man from London known as Governor Blanshard, who wasn鈥檛 affiliated with the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company.

鈥淗e came out here with no independent colonists, really, to govern, and no salary and nothing really to do. Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company held all the power, so he only lasted a year and then went back [to England],鈥 Lutz said. After Blanshard left, Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company leader James Douglas became governor of the colony.

This story of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company and Vancouver Island would be something of a footnote in Northwest history were it not for the palpable and long-lasting impacts the charter created.

Settling into island life

Professor Lutz says that some of the impacts were deep and foundational, with results that eventually became visible to the naked eye.

鈥淲hen the British government established the colony on January 13, 1849, they specified that it should be established according to what they called the 鈥榃akefield Colonization System鈥, named after Mr. Wakefield,鈥 Lutz said. 鈥淸Wakefield鈥檚] idea was that America in the 1840s was a failed experiment, and you didn’t want democracy in the way of American republican democracy; you wanted to reestablish the British aristocratic form of society.鈥

Lutz says that the Wakefield approach included making the cost of land on Vancouver Island expensive, with parcels no smaller than 100 acres, and further stipulations forcing landowners to bring five laborers with them for every 100 acres purchased. This was almost the exact opposite of the 鈥渇ree land鈥 that was made available to settlers in the US via the Homestead Act.

鈥淵ou can see that their idea was they would establish a 鈥榣anded aristocracy鈥 on Vancouver Island,鈥 Lutz said.

These British-style land ownership patterns created a different geographic layout for Victoria than nearby American cities of similar vintage, such as Seattle or Portland.

鈥淚n contrast to the settlement around the Willamette Valley, for example, [where] you get a whole bunch of small farms and people homesteading, you get these really large estates and they’re subdivided, and you can still see that in the geography of Victoria today.鈥

These large estates served as farms for the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company but became valuable real estate investments as Victoria grew. The properties included what鈥檚 now downtown Victoria, and what Lutz calls the 鈥渆lite residential area鈥 known as Uplands. Lutz says you can even see the vestiges of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company when you drive a car.

鈥淵ou can see the main roads — Cadboro Bay Road, Cedar Hill Road — they wind and twist and turn, unlike all the other roads because these are the old roads that take you to Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company farms,鈥 Lutz said.

Another less tangible vestige of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay charter, according to Professor Lutz, is the complex relationships between different ethnic groups and cultures now living in British Columbia.

During the latter years of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company charter, Colonial Governor James Douglas negotiated a with Native Americans on Vancouver Island that still how the current BC provincial government and Canadian federal government relate to what are called 鈥淔irst Nations鈥 in Canada. These treaties are different, smaller in scope, than those negotiated in Washington Territory during the same period by Governor Isaac Stevens, and are generally regarded as less controversial.

And it鈥檚 the relationship between settlers and indigenous peoples that may be the most profound legacy of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company, on Vancouver Island and in all of British Columbia.

Lutz says that the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company men who founded Victoria and who ran the colony on Vancouver Island were different from the American settlers who were coming to the American Northwest on the Oregon Trail. He says that the Americans were more hostile toward Natives, while the Hudson鈥檚 Bay men鈥攚ho were mostly Scots鈥攄eveloped a 鈥渞apport鈥 with the Natives. Hudson鈥檚 Bay Governor James Douglas even married a Native woman, as did many of the men who worked for him.

Professor Lutz says that this 鈥渞apport鈥 contributed to what are still some pretty stark differences between British Columbia and the US.

鈥淲e never had anti-miscegenation acts in British Columbia, for example, which prevented blacks from marrying whites or indigenous people from marrying whites,鈥 Lutz said. 鈥淎nd I think it goes way back to that heritage, and there’s a sense in which racial tensions in Canada are less today than they are in the states.鈥

鈥淥f course there are all kinds of explanations for that,鈥 Lutz said, 鈥渂ut one of them is the fact that the fur traders basically established the first government here, and made it in their own image.鈥

The Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company charter of Vancouver Island lasted a bit less than 10 years. The end came when the Fraser River Gold Rush of 1858 attracted thousands of itinerant settlers to Vancouver Island and to the mainland of what鈥檚 now British Columbia. Governor Douglas, fearing an American takeover not unlike what had happened in the Oregon Country, convinced the British Colonial Office to create a new colony encompassing the mainland. They鈥檇 learned their lesson about what could happen when they lost the prized land north of the Columbia River, Lutz says, and a government independent of the Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company was created to oversee what became British Columbia.

Related: Searching for the long-lost Bellevue whaling fleet

And while it doesn鈥檛 sound like sour grapes, exactly, Dr. Lutz admits that the land to the south of British Columbia that became Washington state is something that many Canadians, including a certain group of academic historians, still covet 171 years after it became part of the US.

鈥淪ometimes my colleagues and I sit around and talk about what British Columbia would’ve looked like if it extended down the Columbia River, and what Canada would look like,鈥 Lutz said. 鈥淚t would be a very different Canada. It would be a Canada with a big population center on the West Coast and one on the East Coast. So we sometimes regret that we surrendered that territory.鈥

Editor鈥檚 Note: The University of Victoria and Songhees First Nation are sponsoring a at the end of February that will examine Vancouver Island history, including the James Douglas treaties and other issues related to Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company history.

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