Puget Sound Agricultural Company
               
               
               
               
               
               The PSAC operated two large farms. The farm at 
Fort Nisqually, now in present day 
Tacoma, Washington, served as the company's headquarters. The second centre was located
                  at 
Cowlitz Farm near present day Toledo, Washington. At 
Cowlitz, the PSAC focused on the production of peas, potatoes, and grain. In the late 
1850s and early 
1860s there was much debate about the company's claim to the territory in 
Washington and 
Oregon especially with the increase in American settlers in the region. Due to this tension,
                  the company felt its land, recognized in an 1840s treaty, was being taken — although
                  this treaty expired in 
May 1859. It should be noted that the treaty disregarded the original Indigenous territory
                  which the PSAC took in order to establish their company.
The PSAC also established itself on 
Vancouver Island in the early 
1850s. In the mid-nineteenth century, the PSAC undertook the development of several farms
                  on 
Vancouver Island. The move to the 
island was due both to the concession to the United States and that it was 
the closest British held region from which the company could continue its operation.
 After surveying the 
island, the company requested that 
about ten square miles
 be reserved, this had to include 
as much open or prairie land as possible.
 In 
1851, land was 
reserved
 for the company near 
Esquimalt Harbour, in which approximately 74 labourers were needed for the purpose of cultivation. In 
1852, the PSAC commenced two large agricultural establishments in both 
Esquimalt and 
Victoria.
In 
1853, Governor 
James Douglas commissioned the PSAC to operate a sheep farm, called Bellevue, on 
San Juan Island. With the already growing disputes on 
San Juan Island and the question of its sovereignty beginning in 
1846, the purpose of the sheep farm was 
to hold the island as a de facto dependency of Vancouver Island.
 Over the next ten years, the farm was surrounded by American settlers who saw the
                  farm as 
an infringement on American territorial rights.
 The creation of the farm did aid in the increase of tension on the 
island with the British wanting to 
hold the island
 and the Americans' unwillingness to 
acknowledge
 the 
HBC's ownership of the territory with the farm. Eventually 
San Juan was awarded to the United States by the German Kaiser.
Beyond these disputes and tensions, the PSAC continues to have a lasting memory on
                  
Vancouver Island, especially through Craigflower Manor. The manor (
1856) is one of the oldest remaining farmhouses in 
British Columbia. It was constructed by the 
HBC, as part of the PSAC's subsidiary endeavours. Today, the farmhouse represents the
                  efforts of the 
HBC to 
establish a base for colonial settlement on Vancouver Island.
 It also remains as a reminder of the importance of farming on 
Vancouver Island prior to 
1858 and the gold rush.
                  
                  
                     - 1. The Puget Sound Agricultural Company, HBC: History Foundation.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Ibid.; Nisqually and Cowlitz Claim of the Hudson Bay Company Boundary Line, The Daily Colonist, 13 December 1860, p.1.
- 4. Brian Charles Coyle, The Puget's Sound Agricultural Company on Vancouver Island: 1847-1857, (Simon Fraser University, 1977).
- 5. Ibid.; Pelly to Grey, 12 June 1851, CO 305/3, 5120, p.373.
- 6. Douglas to Grey, 15 April 1852, CO 305/3, 6485, p.103.
- 7. Quoted in Gordon Robert Lyall, From Imbroglio to Pig Farm: The San Juan Dispute, 1853-71, in History and Memory, BC Studies, no.186, (Summer 2015), p.74.
- 8. Ibid. 74-76.
- 9. Craigflower Manor, Historic Places.