M. Green’s letter contains a series of allegations against the Government most of which are
so entirely inconsistent with facts in the remainder the truth is so strangely distorted
that his statement in this matter and the deductions drawn by him therefore urgently
require to be met with most distinct and positive refutation.—
It is not true as he avers that
in in this Colony we have
no Indian policy whatever
that
there are no Indian agents
and that
the only friends the Indians have in the Colony are the Missionaries.
On the contrary for the past ten years at least during which I have resided in this
Colony— the Government appear to me to have striven to the extent of its power to
protect and befriend the native race and its declared policy has been that the Aborigines
should in all material respects be on the same footing in the eye of the law as people
of European descent. — and that they should be encouraged
to live amongst the white settlers in the country and so by their example be induced
to adopt habits of civilization. In the more settled districts the Indians do now
reside mostly in the settlements working for the white settlers— eating similar food
and wearing similar clothing and having to a great extent relinquished their former
wild primitive mode of life. In these respects the native race has undoubtedly derived
very material benefit from their contact with white peoples whilst it is unhappily
equally certain this it has thence contracted a large share of the
vices vices, and attendant disease, which have ever been inevitably entailed
upon by European races on the Indians of this continent amongst whom they have settled.
This policy towards the Indians has been consistently carried out so far as I am aware
by successive Governors, and under it the Indians have assuredly as
M. Green states
been made amenable to English laws,
exaggerated to write, as he has done, that the Indians have been
suffered to shoot and kill one another within rifle-shot of the city withoutwithout interference
— It may be and I believe is, a fact that during the past (10) years there have been
instances of Indians having shot and killed one another in the outskirts of
Victoria without having been apprehended but they certainly have not been suffered to do so.
On the contrary had they been detected in the commission of such crimes they would
most assuredly have been tried and punished according to English law. In fact Indians
have been tried for this very crimes in
Victoria and hanged; At the trial of all such offenders counsel have been assigned
by by the judge for their defence— unless specially provided by themselves or their
friends — precisely as though they had been white men. For it must be pointed out
that
M Green is again positively incorrect in stating as he has done that the defense of Indians
is a “mere matter of chance. There is no more of the element of chance in this respect
as regards an Indian on his trial than would affect a white man similarly circumstanced—
Money must of course always have its effect in securing the services of able counsel
and in other ways when a man is under trial for any offence against
the law— but in this respect a poor Indian is no worse off than a poor white man—
indeed his is probably not so friendless— as the Judges in this Colony have always
made it their special care that Indians on trial should be at least at no disadvantage
on account of their being Indians—
The Magistrate too throughout the Colony are the specially constituted protectors
of the Indians against injustice. They are in fact
Indian Agents
in all but the name and I am confident that they have so performed this well understood
branch of their duty, that as full a measure
of protection and general advantage has been bestowed on the Indians through their
agency by
^Government out of the pecuniary means at its disposal for this purpose as could have been afforded to them
through the medium of a special Indian Department.
The Indians have in fact been held to the special wards of the Crown, and in the exercise
of this guardianship Government has— in all cases where it has been considered desirable
for the interests of the Indians— set apart such portions of the Crown Lands as were
deemed proportionate to and amply
sufficient for the requirement of each tribe— and these Indian Reserves are held by
Government in trust for the exclusive use and benefit of the Indians resident therein.
But the title of the Indians in the fee of the Public Lands or of any portion thereof
has never been acknowledged by the Government — but on the contrary is distinctly
denied. In no case has any special agreement been made with any of the tribes of the
mainland for the extinction of their claims of possession— but these claims have been
held to have been fully satisfied by securing to each tribe
as the progress of the settlement of
^the country seemed to require— the use of sufficient tracts of land for their wants for agricultural
and pastoral purposes—
In
1850— and
1851 shortly after the first settlement at
Victoria by the Hudson Bay Company at that time granted from the Crown of the whole of
Vancouver Island with full executive powers of their Government their agent Governor Douglas made
agreements with the various families of Indians then occupying the South Eastern portion
of the Island for the relinquishment of their
possessory claims in the district of country around
Fort Victoria in consideration of certain blankets and other goods presented to them— But these
presents were— as I understand— made for the purpose of securing friendly relations
between those Indians and the settlement of
Victoria then in its infancy— and certainly not in acknowledgement of any general title of
the Indians to the lands they occupy.
In reference to
the Cowichan settlement it appears from the records for I cannot speak of this matter from personal knowledge
as I had no
official connection with
Vancouver Island until the year before last that portions of
the Cowichan Valley were surveyed by Government and sold in
1859. The settlement dates therefore from that year although the unoccupied lands in this
district were not thrown open for preemption until
1862. When these lands were surveyed certain sections containing in all 4635 acres were
set apart as Reserves for the use of the Cowichan Indians, and are now held in trust
by Government for that purpose with the exception of about 500 acres which have been
since withdrawn from this
reservation with the consent, as appears from the recorded correspondence in this
office— of the Indians interested therein.
I can find no record of any promise having been made to these Indians that they should
be paid for the lands in
the Cowichan Valley which they may have laid claim to, nor can I learn that any such promise has ever
been made— But it is probable that the Cowichans— when the white people began to settle
among them may have expected and considered themselves entitled to receive for the
lands which they held to be theirs
similar donations to those which had been presented to their neighbours the Saanich
Indians years previously, as before mentioned— on their
relinquishing their claims on the lands around their villages. It is further very likely that it
was
Governor Douglas’ intention that such gratuities should be bestowed on this tribe although no direct
promise to that effect had been made. And in fact presents of agricultural instruments
and tools were authorized to be made to them through this Department last year although
no demands for payment for their lands had to my knowledge
been made by these Indians of Government.
It is unfortunately only too true that the law forbidding the sale of liquor to Indians
although efficacious in the Country Districts especially on the Mainland— is virtually
imperative in
Victoria and its neighbourhood— as its provisions, strict as they are— are evaded by an organized
system between white men who make the vile liquor for this trade— and the Indian traders
who purchase it in quantities to the retailed to their Indian customers on the Reserve—
Government has endeavoured to suppress this most baneful traffic
but the profits are so considerable that those engaged in it in a wholesale way cannot
be tempted to become informers and it is only occasionally that even the minor agents
are apprehended and punished whilst the principal offenders, some of whole it is hinted
are most
respectable persons cannot be traced— It is easy for
M Green to say
he could point out at least a dozen men known to be engaged in this nefarious traffic
but it would no doubt have been difficult for him to have proved this which he asserts
as a known
fact, otherwise he would surely have evidenced his earnestness in the cause of those
on whose behalf he writes by giving such information to the police as might have led
to the punishment of these offenders.
Prostitution is another ~ acknowledged evil prevailing to an almost unlimited extent
among the Indian women in the neighbourhood of
Victoria, but the prevention of this vice is at least as difficult to effect here as in more
civilized communities, and the only direct step forwards this result that appears
open for Government to take would
be to remove the entire Indian population to a distance of some miles from
Victoria a course against which the Indians themselves and the majority of the white inhabitants
would strenuously protest for a variety of reasons — but this course must certainly
be adopted before any measures for the improvement in this respect of the moral and
social condition of the Indian population can be carried into effect with any hope
of success.
In direct refutation of the charges of utter neglect and inhuman treatment of the
Indians at
Victoria during the prevalence of smallpox in
1868, which
M Green makes against Government is will be sufficient for me to recount what came under
my own observation in reference to this subject.
Sometime during the autumn of that year whilst this disease was at its height
M Young at that time Acting Colonial Secretary called my attention to a leading article in
that mornings
British Colonist
— of which
M Green was then editor— which contained most exaggerated representations of the horrible
condition of the Indians on the
Reserve at
Victoria under this visitation, and charges against Government of having utterly failed to
take any steps to prevent the spread of the full contagion— or to alleviate the sufferings
of those attacked by it or even provide for the burial of its victims— statements
in facts of a character and
tenor identical with the charges which are so broadly made in the letter now under reference.
M Young informed me that although he knew these statements had no foundation in fact — he
was then going to investigate the matter
thoroughly, and would be glad if I would accompany him. Accordingly
M Young,
M Pemberton, Police Magistrate of
Victoria— and myself went at once to the Indian Reserve and spent some hours in inspecting
the Indian houses— hospital— grave-yard, etc. and in inquiring into the arrangements
that had been made by the Police Magistrate with the assistance of the
Rev. M Owens at that time resident on the Reserve in charge of the Church of England Indian Mission
thereon, and who also joined us in our inspection.
We found but few— only three-cases of small-pox then existing on the Reserve and these
patients were in care of an attendant, paid by the Government specially as an Indian
Smallpox Hospital and under medical treatment also provided by Government. Those who
had died on the Reserve and in the town of
Victoria had been decently buried to a number of about 50, that being the number of newly
made graves. We could not verify whether these represented all the deaths up to that
time from
smallpox among the Indians— but we certainly saw no dead bodies of Indians left unburied
on the Reserve or elsewhere in the neighbourhood of the town— nor did we learn that
even one such dead body had been found
on the rocks outside the harbour
where
M Green says
hundreds of bodies were left unburied.
The shanties which had been occupied by the smallpox patients together with their
clothes and bedding had been carefully burnt and from all that we saw on the Reserve—
and from the information furnished to us by the
Rev. M Owens—
M Pemberton and others were satisfied that all practicable measures were being taken for the proper
care of the Indian sufferers from smallpox and for the prevention of the spread of
the disease.
I will only add in confirmation of the correctness of the impressions we then formed
to the above effect that this subject was brought under discussion during the last
Session of the Legislature Council by the late
Dr. Davie — then Member for
Victoria District who— speaking of his own knowledge— as he had been unremitting in his professional
services to Indians as well as to white persons afflicted with smallpox, and who,
being one of the Medical Officers appointed by Government for this purpose had frequently
visited this Reserve on such charitable errands— bore testimony to the real and unshrinking
disregard of the danger of contagion which had been exhibited by those to whom the
duty of taking care of the Indians during the late visitation had been entrusted,
and especially by
Sergeant Bowden— the Inspector of Police— whose service in this
respect to solicited the Governor to acknowledge by some complimentary gratuity, and
the rest of the Council having joined in this representation after a discussion in
which the treatment of the Indians during the prevalence of the smallpox was fully
debated and approved of— the Governor was pleased to comply with their request.
I have since ascertained that the deaths from smallpox among the Indians in
1868— as reported by the Police Magistrate amounted including children to eighty eight
(88) and that about $2000 Two
Thousand Dollars were expended by Government in the care of, and medical attendance
on the sufferers and in the burial of the dead.
Unhappily indeed the disease was fatal enough in reality to the white as well as to
the Indian population to need no such imaginative exaggeration as
M Green from motive which I will not undertake to determine although they are I believe sufficiently
apparent in the conclusion of his letter— that allowed his pen to picture.
Most of the Indians from the
outlying District along the Coast fled from the City in their Canoes by the advice
of the authorities but under no compulsion — at the first outbreak of the contagion,
but unfortunately not in time to escape its ravages; for they carried the infection
with them, and those attacked by the dreaded disease on their way homeward were left
by their friends on the shore to perish untended.
Many Indians died in this way in addition to those whose deaths were registered but
I am unable to perceive what measures
it was in the power of Government to take, other than those which were adopted for
the protection and succour of the white and Indian population alike.
I will only remark further on the general subject of the condition of the Indians
in the Colony that it is unhesitatingly acknowledged to be the peculiar responsibility
of Government to use every endeavour to promote the civilization— education— and ultimate
Christianization of the native races within our territory and that any practical scheme
for advancing
this object which it would be within the scope of the pecuniary ability of the Colony
to care into effect would be adapted with alacrity—
At present this good work is almost exclusively in the hands of the Missionaries of
various denominations and much has been effected by their labors in those Stations
where the Indians under their tracking are not subject to those temptations which
seem almost inevitably to overcome them when brought into close contact with the white
population of the towns. But
Government although giving cordially to these Missions every countenance and moral
support in its power has found it impracticable to grant them any pecuniary aid from
the consideration that by so doing it would be involved in the insidious position
of appearing to give special state aid to particular religious bodies.
(Signed.)
13th January 1870