British Columbia
British Columbia is the westernmost province in Canada, with the State of Alaska and
the
Northwest Territory and the
Yukon on its northern border, and the United States to its southern border; it is Canada's
third largest province, after Québec and Ontario, at nearly 950,000 square km. British Columbia confederated after much debate, as discussed below, in 1871.
From 1792-94
Captain George Vancouver named various parts of what we know of today as British Columbia: he charted
Vancouver Island as Quadra and Vancouver's Island, and the coasts of present-day northern Washington
State and southern British Columbia as New Georgia, he then gave the name New Hanover
to the central and northern coast, none of which took cartographic root for long. However, another captain in 1792,
Robert Gray, named the
Columbia River after his ship of the same name, and in subsequent decades the land around the river
soon absorbed the mantle to become the Columbia District, for the British, at least, as the United States considered much of the same region
as Oregon Country, or Territory.
In 1858,
Queen Victoria wrote in agreement to
Lytton's earlier letter that eschewed New Caledonia as a suitable title, as the French had
claimed a colony in the same name, and she offered British Columbia as the best choice,
a designation proclaimed officially at
Fort Langley on November 19, 1858. In
this despatch to
London,
Douglas reports on, among other things, his arrival to
Fort Langley to
proclaim the Act of Parliament providing for the Government of British Columbia,
a ceremony that was
performed at Fort Langley with becoming solemnity on the 19th inst.
The first and Indigenous peoples to settle within the province's current boundaries
may have done so after the last Ice Age, with settlements dated back 6000-8000 years, though recent studies on the subject reveal a much earlier date range for human presence,
at 16,800-14,850 years ago.
Hayes considers it a
near certainty
that Japanese or Chinese sailors plied the northwest coast long before Europeans;
to support this, he cites, among other things, a traditional Chinese tale that, in
219 BC, a junk sent for Japan was forced by incessant storms to a land the lost sailors
would call Fu-sang, or Fousang—a Northwest Coast location noted on several European
maps as late as the mid-eighteenth century. The earliest European presence could go back to the legend of Juan de Fuca's purported
visit to the presently named
Juan de Fuca Strait, in the early 1590s. However, throughout the mid-to-late 1700s, European exploration of the Pacific Northwest
increased steadily, largely due to growing political competition between Russia and
Spain—for example, the latter nation ordered Juan Pérez to the northwest Pacific,
in 1773, in answer to a perceived Russian threat.
British Columbia joined the Dominion of Canada as a province on July 20th, 1871, following
a debate as rich and controversial as the colony's storied past, much of which can
be discovered on this, The Colonial Despatches, database and website. Throughout the period covered by the same, from 1846-1871,
the borders that would demarcate the province, as it is appears today, shifted for
a variety of economic and political reasons, and through several salient treaties
and resolutions, among which was the Hudson's Bay Company and North-West Companies'
licence of exclusive trade with the Indigenous population, in 1821, which was renewed,
albeit in edited form, in 1838.
The Treaty Establishing Boundary West of the
Rocky Mountains, more simply known as the Treaty of 1846, ratified that the divide between the United
States and Great Britain's territories, long tussled over for trade and settlement,
should
be continued westward along the said forty-ninth parallel of north latitude to the
middle of the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver's Island; and thence southerly through the middle of the said channel, and of Fuca's Straits, to the Pacific Ocean.
Unfortunately,
the middle of the channel
would prove to be an equivocal clause.
Douglas argues, in
this despatch, that
Rosario Strait
is the true channel through which the line of Water Boundary was intended to be carried,
and not the
Canal de Haro,
one of the alternative interpretations of the clause. This dispute would catalyze already combustive border tensions to a flash-point on
San Juan Island, during the so-called Pig War, which began in 1859 when Lyman A. Cutler shot dead
a hog, owned by the HBC, that had raided his garden. The matter escalated rapidly into very dire military posturing on both sides, until
the boundary was at last arbitrated in Berlin by
Emperor Wilhelm I, and on October 21, 1872, the
Haro Straight was chosen as the
middle of the channel.
Both British and United States survey teams took six years, from 1857-62, to mark
independently the 49th parallel on mainland British Columbia, a line made ever more
ethereal by lost official reports on both sides, measurement discrepancies, and limitations
of the survey equipment at the time. Initially, a mean line was drawn between the two borders, much to the confusion of
local settlers, no doubt, until the boundary was surveyed again from 1901-1907, and
was found to be hundreds of meters north of its intended mark. In 1908, a new Treaty of Washington was ratified to provide for the more complete definition and demarcation of the international boundary between
the United States and the Dominion of Canada.
- 1. J. Lewis Robinson, British Columbia, The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- 2. G. P. V. Akrigg and H. B. Akrigg, British Columbia Place Names (Vancouver: UBC Press, 1997), 29.
- 3. Ibid.
- 4. D. W. Meinig, The Great Columbia Plain (Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1968), 104-05.
- 5. Akrigg and Akrigg, British Columbia Place Names, 29-30.
- 6. Robinson, British Columbia.
- 7. Theodore G. Shurr, The Peopling of the New World: Perspectives from Molecular Anthropology, Annual Review of Anthropology 33 (2004): 552.
- 8. Derek Hayes, Historical Atlas of British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest (Vancouver: Cavendish Books, 1999), 9.
- 9. Ibid., 16.
- 10. Ibid., 35.
- 11. E. O. S. Scholefield, British Columbia from the Earliest Times to the Present, vol. 1, 1875-1919 (Vancouver: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1914), 669-71 and 672-75.
- 12. Ibid., 675.
- 13. Hubert Howe Bancroft, The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft, vol. 32, History of British Columbia 1792-1887 (San Francisco: The History Company, 1887), 606.
- 14. Ibid., 616.
- 15. Ibid., 638.
- 16. Hayes, Historical Atlas of British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest, 150.
- 17. Ibid.
- 18. International Boundary Commission, Joint Report upon the Survey and Demarcation of the Boundary Between the United States
and Canada (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1921), 9.