Reverend James Gammage was one of two Anglican missionaries sent to the colony of
                     
British Columbia in
                     
1858 by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
                     Parts.
                     Born in 
London, England on 
11 October 1822, he trained as a teacher at St.
                     Mark's College before he joined the priesthood.
                     He entered St. Bees College in 
1855, was made a deacon in 
1857, Curate of St. Mary's
                     
later that year, and priested in
                     
1858.
                     The Society assigned Gammage to be minister to 
the gold hunters at Frazer's River and elsewhere on the main
                        land.
                     
                     Gammage and his wife 
Mariane left England in 
autumn 1858 and arrived at
                     
Esquimalt on
                     
11 April 1859.
                     They were provided free passage on board the 
Thames City through the kindness of her Majesty's
                        Government.
                     Gammage established a mission at 
Douglas on 
Harrison Lake
                     in the interior, raising enough funds to build a church by 
1862. The mission was not successful, however, as most
                     inhabitants of the small community were single men who were not interested in religion.
                     When the completion of the
                     
Cariboo Road through the 
Fraser Canyon provided an
                     alternative transportation route, the mission was closed.
                     Gammage and his wife returned to England in 
1863.
                     He held a number of positions in the Church between 
1864 and
                        1890.
                     He was seventy-one years old when he died in 
1893.