b. 1839-04-26
               
               d. 1898-08-13
               
               
                  
                  Charles Frederick Houghton was born 
26 April 1839 in County Kilkenny, in what is now known as the Republic of Ireland. Houghton joined
                     the British army around age sixteen and rose to the rank of Captain by 
1861. After a limited tour during the Crimean War, Houghton retired to capitalize on grants
                     offered to military captains who were willing to settle in 
British Columbia. He emigrated with his friends, 
Forbes and Charles Vernon, in 
July 1863.
Houghton left Britain with the expectation that all land purchases would come with
                     a remission of £400 to £300. However, after his arrival, Houghton learned that 
Governor James Douglas reduced that remission by 4/5ths. Houghton felt the government owed him and pleaded
                     his case to 
Douglas, who rejected the claim. Houghton then reached out to the Crown. British officials
                     happily assisted Houghton, partially because they considered 
British Columbia a vulnerable colony and wanted more British officers to settle there. By 
May 1864, the Legislative Council passed a law which exempted military officers from 
Douglas's proclamation – as long as said officers emigrated before the official announcements
                     in 
August 1863.
In 
1872, a last-minute election awarded Houghton with a seat in the House of Commons. After
                     Confederation, 
British Columbia called for six representatives to send to Ottawa. 
Arthur T. Bushby, the Postmaster of Houghton's region, forgot to collect nominations and managed to
                     gather a three-person assembly the night of the deadline. The assembly agreed to nominate
                     Houghton. Houghton spent two terms in Ottawa before he abandoned his seat to join
                     the Canadian military.
Houghton married Marion Dunsmuir in 
1879 while stationed in 
Victoria, despite his near decade-long marriage to Sophie N'Kwala. The daughter of an 
Okanagan band chief, N'Kwala had a son and daughter with Houghton before he left. When Marion
                     died in 
1892, Houghton called on his daughter from his previous marriage to live with him in Montreal.
After doctors diagnosed him with throat cancer, Houghton moved back to 
Victoria to stay with his old friend Charles Vernon. Houghton died there on 
13 August 1898.
                     
                     
                        - 1. Margaret A Ormsby, Houghton, Charles Frederick, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Terry Reksten, The Dunsmuir Saga, (Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1991), 121-122.
- 4. Margaret A Ormsby, Houghton, Charles Frederick, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online; Stan Sauerwein, Fintry: Loves, Loves and Dreams, (Victoria, BC: Trafford Publishing, 2000), 66.
- 5. Terry Reksten, The Dunsmuir Saga, (Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1991), 124.