 
                  
                  
                  Copy
                     Augustus L Kuper, Captain,
                     (Signed)
                     
                     
                     20 July 1852
                     
                     No. 5
                     
                     Sir
                     
                     I have the honor to report my proceedings up to this date since I parted from
                     your Flag at 
Callao on the 
10 April last.
                     
                     1. Having crossed the line in 96ç.30" W, fresh South West winds
                     carried us up to 11ç North, when with very little interval of variables,
                     we fell in with the N.E. Trade which was very light throughout. We
                     carried Northerly and N. Westerly winds
up
 up to 38ç North and 135ç West,
                     where we got a fine breeze from the S. Eastward which carried us up to
                     within 150 Miles of 
the Strait of Juan de Fuca, which we entered on the
                     evening of the 
23 May and anchored in 
Esquimault Harbour on the
                     Morning of the 
24th.
                     
                     2. As it was considered full early in the season to insure fine
                     weather at 
Queen Charlottes' Island I completed the ship and wood and
                     water previous to starting and on the morning of the 
5 of June, I
                     left 
Esquimalt Harbor, but owning to calms and strong tides did not
                     succeed in getting fairly into 
the straits of Juan de Fuca until the afternoon

 of the 
7 where we met a very strong breeze, from the
                     Westward accompanied by a dense wet Fog, and we had a very disagreable
                     and anxious beat down the straits during the whole night being able
                     scarcely to see a ships length a head. It cleared off on the
 8
                     and we Made the Southern point of 
Queen Charlottes Island on the evening
                     of the 
13 but owing to light and variable winds did not arrive off
                     our Port until the morning of the 
16&Sth June.
                     
                     3. The only person I could find at 
Fort Victoria who professed to
                     have any knowledge whatever of 
Queen Charlotte's Island, was a 
M
                        Nevin, 
a
a Gentleman now in the 
Hudsons Bay Company's service, who had
                     formerly been Chief Officer of the "
Una" schooner during her two visits
                     to 
the Island and whom 
M Douglas the Governor kindly allowed to
                     accompany me. 
M Nevin declined taking any responsibilities as a
                     Pilot, but I naturally supposed from him having twice visited 
the Island
                     previously, he would possess some useful knowleldge of the localities
                     etc. He proved however of no service whatever and on arriving off the
                     entrance of the straits leading to 
Port Mitchell did not even recognize
                     the headlands, therefore as we 
had
had had a thick fog the whole of the
                     previous day, and were uncertain of our reckoning, and the entrance
                     appeared very much narrower, that it had been described to me, I stood
                     off and on sent a Boat in with an officer to ascertain whether it was
                     the right Place; on her return I bore up and ran through a narrow strait
                     of little more than half a mile in width, with no soundings at 80 and
                     100 fms. in most parts of it and entered 
Port Mitchell at 3 P.M. where I
                     found, the 
Hudsons Bay Company's schooner "
Recovery" the only vessel in 
the Port, anchored close to the Rocks 
near
near the spot where the Company
                     were carrying on their mining operations. I anchored near her with the
                     stream and sent the Boats away to find a secure berth and in the evening
                     ran farther up the Harbour into a Snug Anchorage which I have called
                     
"Thetis" Cove where the ship was safely anchored in 22 fms, with
                     barely room to swing, and surrounded by precipitous hills of nearly 1000
                     feet height.
                     
                     4. It would appear that the information contained in the letter
                     addressed to you by H.M. 
Consul
Consul at 
San Francisco on the 
1 March last
                     was substantially correct but the amount of Gold as yet procured from
                     
Queen Charlotte Island has I think been overated. The only place where
                     gold has as yet been found is in 
Port Mitchell and the Indians maintain
                     that all they have procured came from the same spot, and that they have
                     not found it in any other part of 
the Island, their reports however
                     cannot be depended upon.
                     
                     5. The Hudsons Bay Co's schooner "
Recovery" arrived at 
Port
                        Mitchell from 
Fort Victoria on the 
5 April last
last, with a party of
                     men who had agreed to work on shares the vein of Quartz which had first
                     been worked by those on board the "
Una". The Hudsons' Bay Co. finding
                     all materials, powder, mining tools etc and receiving on half of the
                     proceeds towards paying the expenses, the other half being equally
                     divided amongst those employed, who although the regular servants of the
                     Company, were to receive no wages during the time. This expedition is
                     under the command of 
Doctor Kennedy but from the information I received
                     from him as well as 
from
from some of the miners, it would appear that they
                     had been much disappointed in their expectations. Several of the men
                     had already deserted and the rest all expressed themselves as anxious to
                     get away, as the amount of gold procured would not by the account of
                     
Doctor Kennedy by any means pay the expense of Powder and Tools, and
                     would only give a very trifling share to the men. The gold they have
                     got has been procured by dint of very hard labour, the mere clearing the
                     ground being a matter of difficulty and the stone contiguous to the vein
                     of Quartz being exceedingly hard and difficult to blast. They 
told
told me
                     that they had sometimes been days without finding fold. The vein is
                     close to the waters edge, and the portion opened about 20 feet in length
                     and in the deepest part 6 or 8 feet below the surface.
                     
                     6. I have been unable to obtain any correct information as to what
                     amount of Gold has actually been taken from 
the Island, but the "
Una"
                     previous to her being wrecked in 
Neah Bay in 
the straits of Juan de Fuca
                     certainly got 
some and I was informed by 
Mr. Mitchell who 
then
then
                     commanded the "
Una" and is now in command of the "
Recovery" that when he
                     left 
the Island in the "
Una", there was a considerable amount of gold
                     
visible in the vein, but not being in sufficient numbers on board
                     they were prevented from working it by the Indians, but that the place
                     had been visited subsequently, by a vessel with a party of Adventurers
                     from 
San Francisco, who are supposed to have met with some success. Of
                     the existence of Gold, in considerable quantity upon 
the Island, there
                     can be no doubt 
from
from the specimens of pure Metal which have been brought
                     for Barter by the Indians. The largest piece as yet seen, weighs 22
                     ounces and is in possession of one of the Chiefs, who however places so
                     exorbitant a price upon it (I believe 1500 blankets) that nobody has
                     been able to make a bargain with him. The Mountains as far as we were
                     able to explore abound in veins of Quartz, but the extremely rugged and
                     impracticable nature of the Country will present most serious obstacles
                     to the success of any adventurers who may 
be
be disposed to visit 
the
                        Island in search of gold.
                     
                     7. I enclose a List of the vessels which have visited 
Port
                        Mitchell since 
April last, for the purpose of seeking for gold. I am
                     told that they had each from 40 to 50 Californian adventurers on board,
                     but they appear to have met with no success whatever, and returned to
                     
San Francisco, after remaining only a short time, during which they
                     appear to have examined many of the Hills and water courses in the
                     vicinity of 
the Port. The only persons left hehind were a party of 7 men
                     professing to 
be
be British subjects, whom I found living in a small Rocky
                     Island close to the "
Thetis" anchorage. They had been landed in the
                     beginning of 
May from the schooner "
Susan Sturgess" which vessel they
                     expected daily to return to take them away again. They were preparing a
                     boat in which they intended to return to 
San Francisco should the
                     schooner not arrive shortly. This party were also working a vein of
                     Quartz, not far from that of the 
Hudsons Bay Company, but according to
                     their own account 
had
had not found sufficient gold to make it worth their
                     while to continue their operations and were anxiously looking out for an
                     opportunity to leave 
the Island.
                     
                     8. I have purchased for Her Majestys 
Gov such specimens as I
                     could procure from 
D Kennedy of the gold and gold ore found on 
Queen Charlottes Island. Those of pure Metal were purchased by him from the
                     Indians. The specimens of Quartz all containing more or less gold, were
                     taken from the vein which the Company are now working in 
Port Mitchell.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     9. The Country around 
Port Mitchell, is a series of rugged and
                     precipitous 
Rocky Mountains in some parts perpendicular for 100 feet or
                     more and thickly wooded whenever it is possible for a tree to take root.
                     The woods particularly where exposed to the N.W. winds, are much
                     blighted in many places. It is impossible anywhere to penetrate more
                     than a few yards into the Country without extreme labour, the ground
                     being a mere mass of Rocks and fallen and decayed trees of great size,
                     everywhere 
covered
covered very thickly with moss. [Marginal note. It will be
                     a work of labor to survey this Country if 
the Island is all like this.
                     
AB. We found good water abundant
                     in any accessible streams, but I think it probable that later in the
                     season when the snow is all melted on the Hills that it would be more
                     scarce, as even during our short stay, we found the streams considerably
                     diminished and few were sufficiently large to warrant the supposition,
                     that they would continue to flow during the heat of the summer months.
                     We found the climate damp and very changeable the thermometer during the
                     five days of our stay ranging from 56 to 80 in the shade.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     Lieutenant Moresby after a fatiquing walk, succeeded in reaching a
                     fresh water lake of some extent, about a Mile and a half from the head
                     of the harbour and supposed to be about 400 Feet above the level of the
                     sea and 
Lieuten Peel reached the summit of one of the highest peaks,
                     where he and his party walked for some distance over snow of
                     considerable depth. 
M Peel describes having seen from thence a
                     large inlet or harbour to the Southward. From the information I
                     received, there would appear to be many good Harbours in 
Queen
                        Charlottes Island; Not far to the 
Northward
Northward of 
Port Mitchell is a
                     passage which completely intersects 
the Island and which was navigated
                     by the Hudsons Bay Co's steamer "
Beaver" from the Eastward to within a
                     few miles of its Western Entrance, where she was stopped by dangerous
                     Rapids. The Eastern Coast of 
Queen Charlottes Island is said to be much
                     more level and the neighboring waters not so deep. It is said that
                     Antimony Lead and Iron are plentiful in that part.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     10. The navigation of that part of 
the Island which I visited
                     appears to be very free from hidden dangers, but is difficult and
                     dangerous for sailing vessels 
of
of any size in consequence of the great
                     depth of water everywhere there being no anchorage except in a very few
                     places, too close to the Rocks for a large ship and the Mountains are so
                     high and abrupt that the winds are unsteady and partial.
                     
                     M Geo. Moore the Master of the "
Thetis" has by my direction
                     made a plan of 
Port Mitchell and the channel leading to it, a tracing of
                     which I enclose herewith.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     11. The Indians upon 
Queen Charlottes Island appear to be very
                     numerous and a finer and fairer race of Men, than those on 
Van Couvers Island. From 
our
our first arrival, we were daily surrounded by numbers of
                     large canoes full of Men, Women, and children. All the Tribes within
                     reach came to see what they called the 
Mountain ship and we had at one
                     time upwards of 100 canoes round the ship, but the Indians invariably
                     behaved in the most friendly manner towards us and beyond the noise they
                     made caused us no annoyance whatever. They have almost all some portion
                     of European dress, and many understand some words of English. They are
                     considered to be generally well disposed towards their white visitors,
                     and I was
informed
 informed by the officers of the Hudsons Bay Co. that they
                     rarely had any trouble with them.
                     
                     13. On the 
22 June I got under weigh taking advantage of a
                     light breeze from the S. Eastward which with the assistance of the Boats
                     carried us down to the Entrance of the Straits, when it freshened to a
                     strong breeze with heavy and variable puffs off the land enabling us
                     barely to 
weather
weather the Rocks to the Northward and having hoisted the
                     Boats in I was glad to get 
H.M's ship safe out to sea.
                     
                     14. Shortly after I weighted the American Schooner "
Susan Sturgess" made her appearance round the point, but as I could not
                     recover the anchorage I had left, I sent an officer to board her and
                     finding that she only returned for the purpose of conveying the party
                     landed on 
the Island in 
May, back to 
San Francisco, and had nobody on
                     board, but a sufficient crew to navigate her I proceeded warning the
                     Master of her who together with most of his crew 
were
were Englishmen, that
                     all speculation upon this coast could be there only upon sufferance.
                     
                     15. We had S.E. Winds together with a good deal of rain until off
                     
Cape S James's at Noon on the 
24 when after some hours calm, a
                     Westerly wind sprang up. Passed 
Scotts Islands on the afternoon of the
                     
25 entered the 
Newitty Canal or Goletas Channel on the morning of
                     the 26 crossing the Bay in 9 fms with very smooth water and
                     anchored in 
Beaver Harbour at 1 P.M.
                     
                     16. On the 
28 I went in a Boat to visit the place where the
                     
Hudsons Bay Company are carrying on their 
operations
operations in search of Coal,
                     which is about 10 miles from 
Fort Rupert. They have got boring
                     apparatus at work in three different places, and have reached the
                     several depths of 45, 35 and 27 fms, but hitherto nothing has been
                     brought up to indicate any probability of finding coal.
                     [Marginal note. Hudson's Bay operations for Coal. No coal in mines.
                     [
AB]. I was informed that it is their intention to continue boring
                     to the depths of from 80 to 100 fms, after which no hope of success
                     would be entertained of finding coal in any part of 
Vancouvers Island.
                     The surface coal appears to be 
abundant
abundant in the neighbourhood and is good
                     of its kind.
                     
                     17. No alteration has taken place in the settlement at 
Fort Rupert,
                     since the "
Daphne's" visit in 
July 1851 nor has any vessel visited the
                     Port since, with the exception of the Hudsons Bay Co's steamer "
Beaver"
                     which called there some months ago, in passing on one of her trading
                     voyages to the Northward. The only land cleared or under cultivation
                     consists of 2 or 3 acres of Potatoes and a garden in 
the
the immediate
                     vicinity of 
the Fort.
                     
                     18. I received a most favourable report from 
M Blenkinsopp
                        [Blenkinsop] the gentleman in charge of the establishment at 
Fort Rupert
                     of the conduct of the Indians in 
that neighbourhood generally. I was
                     informed by this gentleman that the Newitty Tribe had latterly been
                     perfectly quiet and peaceable and that shortly after the departure of
                     the "
Daphne " last year they had themselves shot three of the Tribe who
                     had been guilty of the murder of the three white men, and brought the
                     bodies over to 
the  Fort Fort
Fort as a proof when they were recognized as those of
                     the real delinquents.
                     
                     19. I enclose herewith for your information the Copy of a Letter
                     addressed to me at 
Fort Rupert from 
M William Brotchie, who it
                     appears has been occupied for some time in cutting and preparing the
                     spars named in the accompanying List. I went with the master to examine
                     the spars and can confidently bear testimony to their superior quality.
                     
M Brotchie deserves great credit for the patience and perserverance
                     he has displayed in teaching 
the
the Indians to square and trim spars of
                     such large dimensions, and it is much to be regretted that having
                     exhausted all his means, he has not been left in a position to enable
                     him, to get them conveyed to England in completion of his contract with
                     the 
Admiralty, as I feel satisfied that the introduction of spars from
                     
Vancouver's Island for the purposes of H.M's Navy would be most desirable.
                     
                     20. I left 
Beaver Harbour at 10:30 AM, of the 
29 June and
                     beat down the 
Newitty Canal against a strong breeze from 
the
the Westward, making 56 Tacks in 13 hours, crossed the bar at the entrance at midnight
                     in 7 fms. on which there was a very high swell. At 1 A.M. when nearly
                     in Mid channel with the Westernmost visible Point of 
Gallianos Island
                     bearing N.E. we shoaled the water suddenly from 14 to 5 fms with Rocky
                     bottom. As the ship was pitching very deeply, I feared she would have
                     struck but a strong ebb tide flowing swept her over the rock and into
                     deep water again before 
she
she came round on the other Tack. We were
                     becalmed off 
Cape Scott, with a very heavy swell setting on to the point
                     until the afternoon of the 
30 when a breeze sprang up from the
                     Eastward which lasted 3 days a most unusual occurrence I understand at
                     this season of the year. We entered 
the straits of Juan de Fuca at 4
                     P.M. on the 
3 July, but the Fog being too thick to run during the
                     night, did not anchor in 
Esquimalt Harbour until the afternoon of the
                     
4.
                     
                     21. Very little change appears 
to
to have taken place in the
                     settlement of 
Victoria, which is in much the same state, as when you
                     visited it in the "
Portland" last year. There are no new Colonists
                     since then [Marginal note. No fresh Colonists. [
AB]]
                     and the only arrivals during the year, have been about thirty
                     five servants of the Hudsons Bay Co., who I understand are barely
                     sufficient to supply the vancancies caused by desertion or otherwise.
                     
                     The few settlers occupying land in this part of Vancouvers Island
                        complain much of the Hudsons Bay Company, who so far from rendering them
                        any assistance appear appear (by their account) to throw every possible
                        obstacle in the way of the advancement or improvement of the Colony
appear (by their account) to throw every possible
                        obstacle in the way of the advancement or improvement of the Colony, and
                     all not actually in the service of the Company, are anxiously looking
                     forward with the hope that H.M's 
Gov may be induced to take the
                     Colonization of this fine 
Island into their own hands, when it would
                     doubtless become a most valuable possession.
                     
 
                  
                  
                  
                     The Indians during my second visit to 
Esquimalt, were almost all
                     absent at the Salmon Fisheries. They have latterly been quiet and
                     peaceable but 
there
there was some disturbance in 
March last which however was
                     fortunately put down without bloodshed, since then everything has gone
                     on quietly.
                     
                     23. Since my arrival at 
this Port, I have not, after strict
                     enquiry been able to ascertain that it is the intention of any parties
                     here, to renew for the present the search after Gold in 
Queen
                        Charlotte's Island.
                     
                     I have the honor etc etc
                     
                     (Signed) 
Augustus L. Kuper
                     
                     Captain
                     
                     
                     
                     
 
                     
                     .
                     
                     Name of Vessel. Under What Colours Date of arrival Where Fro. Date of Departure
                     
                     Schooner "
Susan Sturges America. 
20 April 185. 
San Francisco 11 May 1852
                     
                     Brig "
Tepic. . . . Englis. 2. . . . . D. . . 15 . "
                     
                     Brig "
Palerma. . . . America. 2. . . . . D. . . 15 . "
                     
                     Schooner "
Mexican. . America. 2. . . . . D. . . . . "
                     
                     Brigantine "
Eagle. . America. . Ma. . 
Columbia River 7 June "
                     
                     Schooner "
Cecil. . . America. 1. . . 
San Francisco 26 May "
                     
                     
                     
                     Captain